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Experimentally induced testicular dysgenesis syndrome originates in the masculinization programming window
Sander van den Driesche, Karen R. Kilcoyne, Ida Wagner, Diane Rebourcet, Ashley Boyle, Rod Mitchell, Chris McKinnell, Sheila Macpherson, Roland Donat, Chitranjan J. Shukla, Anne Jorgensen, Ewa Rajpert-De Meyts, Niels E. Skakkebaek, Richard M. Sharpe
Sander van den Driesche, Karen R. Kilcoyne, Ida Wagner, Diane Rebourcet, Ashley Boyle, Rod Mitchell, Chris McKinnell, Sheila Macpherson, Roland Donat, Chitranjan J. Shukla, Anne Jorgensen, Ewa Rajpert-De Meyts, Niels E. Skakkebaek, Richard M. Sharpe
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Research Article Endocrinology Reproductive biology

Experimentally induced testicular dysgenesis syndrome originates in the masculinization programming window

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Abstract

The testicular dysgenesis syndrome (TDS) hypothesis, which proposes that common reproductive disorders of newborn and adult human males may have a common fetal origin, is largely untested. We tested this hypothesis using a rat model involving gestational exposure to dibutyl phthalate (DBP), which suppresses testosterone production by the fetal testis. We evaluated if induction of TDS via testosterone suppression is restricted to the “masculinization programming window” (MPW), as indicated by reduction in anogenital distance (AGD). We show that DBP suppresses fetal testosterone equally during and after the MPW, but only DBP exposure in the MPW causes reduced AGD, focal testicular dysgenesis, and TDS disorders (cryptorchidism, hypospadias, reduced adult testis size, and compensated adult Leydig cell failure). Focal testicular dysgenesis, reduced size of adult male reproductive organs, and TDS disorders and their severity were all strongly associated with reduced AGD. We related our findings to human TDS cases by demonstrating similar focal dysgenetic changes in testes of men with preinvasive germ cell neoplasia (GCNIS) and in testes of DBP-MPW animals. If our results are translatable to humans, they suggest that identification of potential causes of human TDS disorders should focus on exposures during a human MPW equivalent, especially if negatively associated with offspring AGD.

Authors

Sander van den Driesche, Karen R. Kilcoyne, Ida Wagner, Diane Rebourcet, Ashley Boyle, Rod Mitchell, Chris McKinnell, Sheila Macpherson, Roland Donat, Chitranjan J. Shukla, Anne Jorgensen, Ewa Rajpert-De Meyts, Niels E. Skakkebaek, Richard M. Sharpe

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Figure 5

Dibutyl phthalate exposure in the masculinization programming window, but not the late window, results in compensated Leydig cell failure in adulthood.

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Dibutyl phthalate exposure in the masculinization programming window, bu...
Note that blood testosterone levels are not different between groups (A), but DBP-MPW rats require significantly higher LH levels (B) to maintain this, resulting in an increase in the LH/log testosterone ratio (C) specifically in the DBP-MPW group; this was evident for rats with scrotal or cryptorchid testes but was more marked for the latter (C). Compensated Leydig cell failure was inversely correlated with anogenital distance (D) and average testis weight (E). (A–C) Values are mean ± SEM, with analysis by ANOVA with Bonferroni correction (**P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, in comparison to respective control). (D and E) Data were analyzed by linear regression. DBP, dibutyl phthalate; MPW, masculinization programming window; LW, late window.

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