Safeguarding Female Reproductive Health Against Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals—The FREIA Project
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. EDC Exposure and Female Reproductive Disorders: The Current State of Knowledge
2.1. Female Reproductive Health
2.2. Characterisation of Susceptible Windows
2.3. In the Womb
2.4. Puberty
2.5. Adulthood
3. Advancing Test Methods for EDC Identification in Chemical Regulations
3.1. Mechanistic Descriptions of Female Reproductive Toxicity
3.2. Dedicated Endpoints and Bioassays to Address EDC-Related Female Reproductive Toxicity
- (1)
- Ovarian follicle counts performed in adult animals is included in selected OECD test guidelines, including the Extended One-Generation Reproductive Toxicity Study (TG 443). FREIA aims to improve follicle counting as currently recommended methods are highly affected by the size of the ovary and does not necessarily reflect the total follicle number.
- (2)
- Comparison of gene expression changes in key cell types in rat ovaries and in granulosa cells from human follicular fluids will help us to find biomarkers for oocyte quality, which are currently lacking in OECD test guidelines.
- (3)
- Morphological changes in early mammary development by image analysis of mammary gland whole mounts are considered sensitive markers of endocrine disruption in female rodents, yet is currently not part of any OECD test guideline. We will improve whole mount examination in the rat mammary gland. An unbiased and sensitive software tool will be applied for examination of mammary gland whole mounts collected at young age [40].
- (4)
- Puberty is a time with great hormonal changes, including a dramatic increase in DHEA over the adrenarche, yet this is largely overlooked in current test strategies dealing with EDCs. In FREIA we will evaluate the need for implementation of elements of the female pubertal assay, an established protocol (US EPA OPPTS 890.145), into current or future OECD test guidelines.
- (5)
- Changes in GnRH secretion preceding pubertal onset is considered a key event in ovarian dysfunction after EDC exposure. The effects of DES and ketoconazole on pulsatile GnRH release and hypothalamic transcriptional markers will be studied in primary rodent hypothalamic explants and compared with effects on GnRH release of in vivo exposed hypothalamus. This will allow the study of effects of prenatal exposure on the programming of maturation of GnRH secretion.
- (1)
- Quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSARs) allow us to predict molecular targets based on physico-chemical properties of a chemical. We will improve existing QSARs for aromatase and PPAR-gamma, two of the key events in a proposed adverse outcome pathway for female reproductive toxicity. These QSAR models and predictions will be made publicly available via the freely available DTU Danish (Q)SAR database (http://qsar.food.dtu.dk/) to open the possibility of integrating dedicated QSARs into toxicological risk assessment strategies.
- (2)
- Oestrogen receptor ER-beta (ESR2) plays a central role in ovarian development and function [41], yet concentration-effect data of EDCs on this receptor is limited. A high content analysis (HCA) assay utilizing an enhanced green-fluorescence tagged ER-beta nuclear receptor transfected into the U2OS cell line will be optimised and employed for screening of selected and human relevant EDCs over a concentration range for ER-beta concentration-response activity.
- (3)
- G-coupled protein oestrogen receptor (GPER) is suggested to act as selector during folliculogenesis [42] and may be involved in various ovarian pathologies [43]. GPER is also often more highly expressed in human fetal tissues than ER-alpha (ERS1) or ESR2. A novel high content analysis (HCA) assay for the GPER will be developed alongside HCA assays to assess subtle pre-lethal cytotoxicity in female reproductive cells.
- (4)
- It is not known whether the standardised steroidogenic assay OECD TG 456, which uses the adrenal corticocarcinoma cell line H295R and focuses only on progesterone, testosterone, and oestradiol synthesis, is sufficiently applicable to describe (interactions with) ovarian-specific steroidogenesis. This issue will be clarified by comparing steroidomic profiles obtained from human fetal ovarian and adrenal gland cultures, adult primary human ovarian tissue cultures, and human-derived granulosa cell lines.
- (5)
- For obvious ethical reasons, in vitro studies to assess human oocyte maturation and competency after fertilisation cannot be used for routine screening of EDCs in a regulatory context. In contrast, bovine ovarian tissues and follicles can easily be obtained from slaughterhouses. From these collected follicles, oocytes can be isolated and matured and used for in vitro fertilisation experiments, where embryonic development can be followed routinely until blastocyst hatching and elongation. Several studies have demonstrated the value of such bovine oocytes as experimental model for human reproductive parameters [44]. This test method adheres fully to the 3R-principle of toxicity testing in the 21st Century. Bovine oocyte studies will be performed to assess the effects of EDCs on oocyte maturation and the post-fertilisation competence to develop into a healthy embryo will be explored.
3.3. Testing for EDCs in the Regulatory Context
4. Sharing and Safeguarding
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
AOP | Adverse outcome pathway |
BPA | Bisphenol A |
DDT | Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane |
DEHP | Bis(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate |
DES | Diethylstilbestrol |
DHEA(S) | Dehydroepiandrosterone(-sulfate) |
EATS | Estrogen-androgen-thyroid-steroidogenesis |
EDC | Endocrine disrupting chemical |
FREIA | “Female Reproductive toxicity of EDCs: a human evidence-based screening and Identification Approach” |
FSH | Follicle stimulating hormone |
GnRH | Gonadotropin-releasing hormone |
GPER | G-coupled protein oestrogen receptor |
HP(A)G axis | Hypothalamic-pituitary-(adrenal)-gonadal axis |
IATA | Integrated approach to testing and assessment |
LH | Luteinizing hormone |
OECD | Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development |
PCOS | Polycystic ovary syndrome |
POF | Premature ovarian failure |
POI | Primary ovarian insufficiency |
REACH | Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and restriction of CHemicals |
TG | Test guideline |
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van Duursen, M.B.M.; Boberg, J.; Christiansen, S.; Connolly, L.; Damdimopoulou, P.; Filis, P.; Fowler, P.A.; Gadella, B.M.; Holte, J.; Jääger, K.; et al. Safeguarding Female Reproductive Health Against Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals—The FREIA Project. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2020, 21, 3215. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21093215
van Duursen MBM, Boberg J, Christiansen S, Connolly L, Damdimopoulou P, Filis P, Fowler PA, Gadella BM, Holte J, Jääger K, et al. Safeguarding Female Reproductive Health Against Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals—The FREIA Project. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2020; 21(9):3215. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21093215
Chicago/Turabian Stylevan Duursen, Majorie B. M., Julie Boberg, Sofie Christiansen, Lisa Connolly, Pauliina Damdimopoulou, Panagiotis Filis, Paul A. Fowler, Bart M. Gadella, Jan Holte, Kersti Jääger, and et al. 2020. "Safeguarding Female Reproductive Health Against Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals—The FREIA Project" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 21, no. 9: 3215. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21093215
APA Stylevan Duursen, M. B. M., Boberg, J., Christiansen, S., Connolly, L., Damdimopoulou, P., Filis, P., Fowler, P. A., Gadella, B. M., Holte, J., Jääger, K., Johansson, H. K. L., Li, T., Mazaud-Guittot, S., Parent, A. -S., Salumets, A., Soto, A. M., Svingen, T., Velthut-Meikas, A., Bay Wedebye, E., ... van den Berg, M. (2020). Safeguarding Female Reproductive Health Against Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals—The FREIA Project. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 21(9), 3215. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21093215