Vanadium induced ultrastructural changes and apoptosis in male germ cells

Male Air Pollutants 0303 health sciences Dose-Response Relationship, Drug Apoptosis Mice, Inbred Strains Vanadium Mice 03 medical and health sciences Seminiferous Epithelium In Situ Nick-End Labeling Animals Testosterone Spermatogenesis Progesterone
DOI: 10.1016/j.reprotox.2004.11.016 Publication Date: 2005-03-08T23:31:07Z
ABSTRACT
Vanadium is a transition metal that is emitted to the atmosphere during combustion of fossil fuels. In the environment, vanadium occurs in the (V) oxidized form, but in the body it is found exclusively in the (IV) oxidized form. Vanadium tetraoxide is an inorganic chemical species in the (IV) oxidized form that has been shown to induce toxic effects in vitro and in vivo. The reproductive toxicity of vanadium in males was studied through monitoring germ cell apoptosis during spermatogenesis. We analyzed ultrastructural damage, and testosterone and progesterone concentrations following vanadium tetraoxide administered to male mice for 60 days. Spermatogenesis stages I-III and X-XII frequently showed apoptotic germ cells in control and treated animals; vanadium tetraoxide treatment induced an increase in the number of germ cell apoptosis in stages I-III and XII at 9.4 and 18.8 mg/kg, respectively. Although spermatogenesis is regulated by testosterone, in our study this hormone level was not modified by vanadium administration; thus, germ cell death was not related with testosterone concentration. At the ultrastructural level, we observed inclusion structures that varied as to location and content in the Sertoli and germ cells.
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