Abstract

Decabromodiphenyl ether (BDE-209), a frequently used brominated flame retardant, readily enters the environment and is difficult to degrade with bioaccumulation. BDE-209 could cause male reproductive toxicity, but the regulatory functions of Sertoli cells-secreted factors remain uncertain. In present study, male mice were treated with 75 mg/kg BDE-209 and then stopped exposure for 50 days. Exogenous Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF), a Sertoli cell-secreted factor, was injected into testes of mice treated with BDE-209 for 50 days to explore the role of GDNF in BDE-209-induced reproductive toxicity. The mouse spermatogonia cell line GC-1 spg was used in vitro to further verify regulatory effects of Sertoli cells-secreted factors on meiotic initiation. The results showed that BDE-209 inhibited expressions of the self-renewal pathway GFRα-1/RAS/ERK1/2 in spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs), and reduced expressions of spermatogonia proliferation-related pathway NRG3/ERBB4 and meiosis initiation factor Stra8. Furthermore, BDE-209 decreased the levels of both GDNF and retinoic acid (RA) secreted by Sertoli cells in testes. Importantly, the alterations of above indicators induced by BDE-209 did not recover after 50-day recovery period. After exogenous GDNF injection, the decreased expression of GFRα-1/RAS/ERK in SSCs was reversed. However, the level of RA and expressions of NRG3/ERBB4/Stra8 were not restored. The in vitro experimental results showed that exogenous RA reversed the reductions in NRG3/ERBB4/Stra8 and ameliorated inhibition of GC-1 spg cells proliferation induced by BDE-209. These results suggested that Sertoli cells-secreted factors play roles in regulating various stages of germ cell development. Specifically, BDE-209 affected the self-renewal of SSCs by decreasing GDNF secretion resulting in the inhibition of GFRα-1/RAS/ERK pathway; BDE-209 hindered the proliferation of spermatogonia and initiation of meiosis by inhibiting the secretion of RA and preventing RA from binding to RARα, resulting in the suppression of NRG3/ERBB4/Stra8 pathway. As a consequence, spermatogenesis was compromised, leading to persistent male reproductive toxicity.

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