The dog as a sentinel species for environmental effects on human fertility

Despite the vast body of evidence that environmental toxicants adversely affect reproductive development and function across species, demonstrating true cause and effect in the human remains a challenge. Human meta-analytical data, showing a temporal decline in male sperm quality, are paralleled by...

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Published in:Reproduction
Main Authors: Sumner, Rebecca Nicole, Harris, Imogen Thea, Van der Mescht, Morne, Byers, Andrew, England, Gary Crane William, Lea, Richard Graham
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Bioscientifica 2020
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/rep-20-0042
https://rep.bioscientifica.com/view/journals/rep/159/6/REP-20-0042.xml
https://rep.bioscientifica.com/downloadpdf/journals/rep/159/6/REP-20-0042.xml
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spelling crbioscientif:10.1530/rep-20-0042 2024-06-23T07:50:36+00:00 The dog as a sentinel species for environmental effects on human fertility Sumner, Rebecca Nicole Harris, Imogen Thea Van der Mescht, Morne Byers, Andrew England, Gary Crane William Lea, Richard Graham 2020 http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/rep-20-0042 https://rep.bioscientifica.com/view/journals/rep/159/6/REP-20-0042.xml https://rep.bioscientifica.com/downloadpdf/journals/rep/159/6/REP-20-0042.xml unknown Bioscientifica Reproduction volume 159, issue 6, page R265-R276 ISSN 1470-1626 1741-7899 journal-article 2020 crbioscientif https://doi.org/10.1530/rep-20-0042 2024-05-30T08:13:39Z Despite the vast body of evidence that environmental toxicants adversely affect reproductive development and function across species, demonstrating true cause and effect in the human remains a challenge. Human meta-analytical data, showing a temporal decline in male sperm quality, are paralleled by a single laboratory study showing a similar 26-year decline in the dog, which shares the same environment. These data are indicative of a common cause. Environmental chemicals (ECs) detected in reproductive tissues and fluids induce similar, short term, adverse effects on human and dog sperm. Both pre- and post-natal stages of early life development are sensitive to chemical exposures and such changes could potentially cause long term effects in the adult. The environmental ‘pollutome’ (mixtures of ECs) is determined by industrialisation, atmospheric deposition and bioaccumulation and characterises real-life exposure. In Arctic ecosystems, dietary and non-dietary chemical contaminants are detectable in biological tissues and linked with adverse health effects in both dogs and their handlers. In the female, such exposure could contribute to disorders such as ovarian insufficiency, dysregulated follicle development, ovarian cancer, and polycystic ovarian syndrome. In the dog, ovarian chemical concentrations are greater in the testis. In addition, preliminary studies indicate that dietary exposures may influence the sex ratio in the offspring in favour of females. Within this article, we review current knowledge on chemical effects on human reproduction and suggest that the dog, as a sentinel species for such effects, is an essential tool for addressing critical data gaps in this field. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Bioscientifica Arctic Reproduction 159 6 R265 R276
institution Open Polar
collection Bioscientifica
op_collection_id crbioscientif
language unknown
description Despite the vast body of evidence that environmental toxicants adversely affect reproductive development and function across species, demonstrating true cause and effect in the human remains a challenge. Human meta-analytical data, showing a temporal decline in male sperm quality, are paralleled by a single laboratory study showing a similar 26-year decline in the dog, which shares the same environment. These data are indicative of a common cause. Environmental chemicals (ECs) detected in reproductive tissues and fluids induce similar, short term, adverse effects on human and dog sperm. Both pre- and post-natal stages of early life development are sensitive to chemical exposures and such changes could potentially cause long term effects in the adult. The environmental ‘pollutome’ (mixtures of ECs) is determined by industrialisation, atmospheric deposition and bioaccumulation and characterises real-life exposure. In Arctic ecosystems, dietary and non-dietary chemical contaminants are detectable in biological tissues and linked with adverse health effects in both dogs and their handlers. In the female, such exposure could contribute to disorders such as ovarian insufficiency, dysregulated follicle development, ovarian cancer, and polycystic ovarian syndrome. In the dog, ovarian chemical concentrations are greater in the testis. In addition, preliminary studies indicate that dietary exposures may influence the sex ratio in the offspring in favour of females. Within this article, we review current knowledge on chemical effects on human reproduction and suggest that the dog, as a sentinel species for such effects, is an essential tool for addressing critical data gaps in this field.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Sumner, Rebecca Nicole
Harris, Imogen Thea
Van der Mescht, Morne
Byers, Andrew
England, Gary Crane William
Lea, Richard Graham
spellingShingle Sumner, Rebecca Nicole
Harris, Imogen Thea
Van der Mescht, Morne
Byers, Andrew
England, Gary Crane William
Lea, Richard Graham
The dog as a sentinel species for environmental effects on human fertility
author_facet Sumner, Rebecca Nicole
Harris, Imogen Thea
Van der Mescht, Morne
Byers, Andrew
England, Gary Crane William
Lea, Richard Graham
author_sort Sumner, Rebecca Nicole
title The dog as a sentinel species for environmental effects on human fertility
title_short The dog as a sentinel species for environmental effects on human fertility
title_full The dog as a sentinel species for environmental effects on human fertility
title_fullStr The dog as a sentinel species for environmental effects on human fertility
title_full_unstemmed The dog as a sentinel species for environmental effects on human fertility
title_sort dog as a sentinel species for environmental effects on human fertility
publisher Bioscientifica
publishDate 2020
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/rep-20-0042
https://rep.bioscientifica.com/view/journals/rep/159/6/REP-20-0042.xml
https://rep.bioscientifica.com/downloadpdf/journals/rep/159/6/REP-20-0042.xml
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
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op_source Reproduction
volume 159, issue 6, page R265-R276
ISSN 1470-1626 1741-7899
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1530/rep-20-0042
container_title Reproduction
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container_issue 6
container_start_page R265
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