生物
内分泌学
内科学
后代
精子发生
哺乳期
支持细胞
增殖细胞核抗原
精子
人口
男科
怀孕
免疫组织化学
免疫学
医学
环境卫生
植物
遗传学
作者
Alana Rezende Godoi,Vanessa Caroline Fioravante,Beatriz Melo Santos,Francisco Eulógio Martinez,Patricia Fernanda Felipe Pinheiro
标识
DOI:10.1093/biolre/ioac190
摘要
Abstract We investigated the effects of fetal programming in Sprague–Dawley rats through the maternal consumption of sodium saccharin on the testicular structure and function in male offspring. Feed intake and efficiency, organ and fat weight, quantification and expression of androgen receptor (AR), and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) proteins, sperm count, and hormone levels were determined. Consumption alterations were found in the final weeks of the experiment. Decreases in AR and PCNA expression and quantification, tubular diameter, and luminal volume, and increases in epithelial and interstitial relative volumes were observed. Lower sperm count and transit, and lower estradiol concentration were also found. Sodium saccharin consumption by dams programmed male offspring by affecting the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonad axis with alterations in the Sertoli cell population, in spermatogonia proliferation, the expression and quantification of AR, and in sperm count. We hypothesized that these changes may be due to an estradiol reduction that caused the loosening of adhesion junctions of the blood–testis barrier, causing cell losses during spermatogenesis, also reflected by a decrease in tubular diameter with an increase in epithelial volume and consequent decrease in luminal volume. We conclude that maternal sodium saccharin consumption during pregnancy and lactation programmed alterations in the reproductive parameters of male offspring, thus influencing spermatogenesis.
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