Abstract

Although the toxicity of melamine to the kidneys and testes is well known, few studies have investigated the effects of melamine on female reproductive organs. Therefore, this study explores the effects of oral administration melamine or melamine and cyanuric acid for 28 days on the ovaries of female rats. Rats that were exposed to the mixture exhibited reduced ovarian and uterine weights, a shorter estrous cycle, and reduced serum estrogen and progesterone levels compared to rats that were exposed to melamine and control rats. Furthermore, morphological analysis revealed pathological changes in the ovaries of rats exposed to melamine or the mixture, such as more atretic follicles and necrosis of oocytes and granulosa cells. TUNEL staining revealed that the exposed groups had a higher proportion of TUNEL-positive granulosa cells than the control group, and the mRNA expressions of SOD1, GPX1, GPX2, P450scc, 17β-HSD I, and 17β-HSD II were reduced in the exposure groups compared with the control group. These results indicated that exposure to melamine alone or to the melamine-cyanuric acid mixture could damage the ovaries in rats.

Highlights

  • Melamine is an organic base that is a cyanamide trimer, and it is composed of a 1,3,5-triazine skeleton

  • No significant difference was found in body and ovarian weights, duration of the estrous cycle and levels of E2 and P in cyanuric acid (CA)-treated group and the control group (P > 0.05), and no obvious morphological changes in the ovaries was observed in CA-treated group (Fig 1)

  • These results indicate that CA has no toxicity to the ovary

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Summary

Introduction

Melamine is an organic base that is a cyanamide trimer, and it is composed of a 1,3,5-triazine skeleton. Studies on animals have found that cyanuric acid and melamine when present in pet and livestock feed caused kidney damage, including degeneration and necrosis of renal tubule epithelia, proliferation of connective tissue, and acute kidney failure [1, 11]. In 2007, the presence of cyanuric acid and melamine in pet food have reportedly caused the death of thousands of companion animals in the USA [1]. These two incidents generate more concerns about the toxicities of melamine and cyanuric acid

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