Abstract

High doses of cadmium (Cd) cause irreversible injury to the reproductive system, especially testicular tissue. Studies have shown that pyroptosis is involved in Cd-induced tissue damage, but whether pyroptosis is involved in damage to testicular tissue following Cd exposure remains unclear. To investigate the mechanism of pyroptosis in testicular injury induced by Cd exposure, we used 8-week-old male C57BL/6J mice subjected to consecutive 7 days of intraperitoneal injection of cadmium chloride (CdCl2) at concentrations of 0, 1.0 and 3.0 mg/kg. The results indicated that 3.0 mg/kg CdCl2 significantly decreased serum testosterone levels, sperm concentration and sperm motility, while increased LDH and IL-1β levels. Testicular HE staining indicated that Cd exposure damaged the interstitial cells and increased the atypical residual bodies. Fluorescence results indicated that 3.0 mg/kg CdCl2 increased ROS levels, DNA damage, and the number of TUNEL-positive seminiferous tubule cells in testicular tissue. Transcriptome analysis showed that Cd exposure mainly induced inflammatory and chemokine signaling pathways in testicular tissue, with upregulated mRNA levels of Aim2, and reduced mRNA levels of Nlrp3. Further analysis showed that 3.0 mg/kg CdCl2 increased the expression of testicular HO-1, SOD2, γH2AX and PARP-1, as well as the pyroptosis-related factors GSDMD, GSDME, Caspase-1, ASC and IL-1β. In conclusion, our results provide a possible mechanism by which Cd exposure activates the AIM2 pathway by increasing oxidative stress injury to induce pyroptosis in testicular tissue. This provides a new perspective on testicular damage caused by Cd exposure.

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