Gonadal intersex and high prevalences of the female phenotype have been observed in fish populations in urbanized areas. Environmental estrogens discharged in sewage treatment plant effluents may be responsible for feminization of fish but many compounds with the potential to induce these responses occur in effluents, including natural and synthetic estrogen hormones, degradation products of alkylphenol ethoxylate surfactants, and plasticizers. In this study, the estrogen hormones 17 alpha-ethinylestradiol, 17 beta-estradiol, estrone, and estriol induced intersex (i.e., testis-ova) and altered sex in Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes) when these fish were exposed to nanogram per liter concentrations of test compounds from hatch to approximately 100 d after hatch. A mix of nonylphenol mono- and diethoxylate induced a weak response and a mix of nonylphenol mono- and diethoxycarboxylate did not give a response in this assay at microgram per liter concentrations, indicating that these degradation products of nonylphenol ethoxylates have little or no estrogenic activity in fish. Bisphenol A induced testis-ova in medaka exposed to a concentration of 10 micrograms/L, but diethylhexyl phthalate did not induce a response. Results with the medaka assay were consistent with estrogenic responses in the yeast estrogen screening assay. Analyses of monitoring data reported in the literature indicate that concentrations of estrogen hormones detected in the final effluents of sewage treatment plants are generally greater than the lowest-observed-effect levels for alterations to gonadal development in medaka.
Gonadal intersex and high prevalences of the female phenotype have been observed in fish populations in urbanized areas. Environmental estrogens discharged in sewage treatment plant effluents may be responsible for feminization of fish but many compounds with the potential to induce these responses occur in effluents, including natural and synthetic estrogen hormones, degradation products of alkylphenol ethoxylate surfactants, and plasticizers. In this study, the estrogen hormones 17 alpha-ethinylestradiol, 17 beta-estradiol, estrone, and estriol induced intersex (i.e., testis-ova) and altered sex in Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes) when these fish were exposed to nanogram per liter concentrations of test compounds from hatch to approximately 100 d after hatch. A mix of nonylphenol mono- and diethoxylate induced a weak response and a mix of nonylphenol mono- and diethoxycarboxylate did not give a response in this assay at microgram per liter concentrations, indicating that these degradation products of nonylphenol ethoxylates have little or no estrogenic activity in fish. Bisphenol A induced testis-ova in medaka exposed to a concentration of 10 micrograms/L, but diethylhexyl phthalate did not induce a response. Results with the medaka assay were consistent with estrogenic responses in the yeast estrogen screening assay. Analyses of monitoring data reported in the literature indicate that concentrations of estrogen hormones detected in the final effluents of sewage treatment plants are generally greater than the lowest-observed-effect levels for alterations to gonadal development in medaka.
The estrogenic isoflavone compound genistein recently has been found in the effluents of sewage treatment plants and pulp mills, and the related compound equol has been detected in the runoff from agricultural fields treated with hog manure. Waterborne exposures of Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes) to equol from soon after hatch to approximately 100 days posthatch induced gonadal intersex (i.e., testis-ova) in males at incidences of 10 and 87% in equol treatments of 0.4 and 0.8 µg/L, respectively. Exposure to the highest test concentration of genistein, 1,000 µg/L, also caused a low incidence (i.e., 12%) of gonadal intersex in male medaka. The ovaries of female medaka from both equol and genistein treatments showed delayed oocyte maturation, atretic oocytes, an enlarged ovarian lumen, proliferation of somatic stromal tissue, and primordial germ cells; responses were concentration dependent. Alterations to externally visible secondary sex characteristics occurred in medaka exposed to both equol and genistein. In treatments with 1,000 µg/L genistein, 72% of male medaka (as identified by the gonadal phenotype) showed feminized secondary sex characteristics. Gonadal intersex and alterations to secondary sex characteristics have been noted in several fish populations around the world. This laboratory study indicates that isoflavone compounds should be considered candidate estrogenic compounds that may be involved in the alteration of sexual development in feral fish populations.
Abstract-Various isomers and metabolites of DDT disrupt endocrine systems and gonadal development in fish and wildlife, and o,pЈ-DDT has been shown to be an relatively potent estrogen agonist. In this study, we exposed Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes) to o,pЈ-DDT using two exposure protocols: direct exposure of early life stages to aqueous solutions from 1 to 100 d posthatch and exposure of female medaka to aqueous solutions, followed by mating with unexposed males to produce offspring that were exposed through mechanisms of maternal transfer. In treatments with direct aqueous exposures, an intersex condition of the gonad (testisova) was observed in male medaka exposed at early life stages to nominal o,pЈ-DDT concentrations of 50, 10, and 5 g/L, indicating that this estrogen agonist can alter gonadal development when exposure occurs continuously over the period of gonadal differentiation. Comparisons with previously published data on the induction of testis-ova by exposure to nonylphenol (NP) and octylphenol (OP) indicated that the relative potencies for induction of intersex in medaka are o,pЈ-DDT Ͼ NP ഠ OP, which is not consistent with the relative estrogenic potencies of OP Ͼ NP Ͼ o,pЈ-DDT observed in the yeast estrogen screening (YES) assay. In the maternal transfer protocol, no testis-ova were observed in the offspring, although there was some delay in time to hatch of the offspring. Medaka exposed by maternal transfer showed no other toxicological responses during early life stages, but when treated fish reached sexual maturity, the females showed more advanced development of oocytes. In addition, when medaka exposed by maternal transfer were subsequently exposed at 10 months of age to 17-estradiol (12 mg/L), there was a significantly greater induction of hepatic vitellogenin in DDT-exposed males in comparison to control males, indicating that exposure to estrogenic chemicals during early life stages may potentiate vitellogenin induction following exposure events later in the life of the fish.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.