Exposure to cadmium during gestation and lactation affects development and function of Leydig cells in male offspring

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc

E-ISSN: 1522-7278|33|3|351-360

ISSN: 1520-4081

Source: ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY, Vol.33, Iss.3, 2018-03, pp. : 351-360

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Abstract

AbstractToxic effects of maternal exposure to Cadmium (Cd) on Leydig cells of male offspring arises much concern recently, but its toxic effects on the development of Leydig cells and androgen synthesis have not been elucidated. In this study, female rats were exposed to Cd during gestation and lactation, and the development of Leydig cells in the first filial‐generation (F1) male rats was investigated. The steroidogenic signaling pathway and biomarkers related to the development of Leydig cells were detected to disclose how maternal Cd‐exposure caused reproductive damage. F1 male rats with maternal Cd‐exposure gained a low relative weight of testis and declined levels of steroid hormones. Maternal Cd‐exposure interrupted the development of Leydig cells with high expression of SRD5α and cell morphology of immature Leydig cells in adulthood, inhibited the activation of cyclic adenosine monophosphate/ protein kinase A signaling pathway and down‐regulated the steroidogenic enzymes. These results would help to disclose the origin of male sexual dysfunction in the developmental stages of Leydig cells.