scholarly journals Environmental influences on ovarian dysgenesis — developmental windows sensitive to chemical exposures

2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (7) ◽  
pp. 400-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hanna Katarina Lilith Johansson ◽  
Terje Svingen ◽  
Paul A. Fowler ◽  
Anne Marie Vinggaard ◽  
Julie Boberg
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew D. Grotzinger ◽  
Daniel A. Briley ◽  
Laura E. Engelhardt ◽  
Frank D. Mann ◽  
Megan W. Patterson ◽  
...  

AbstractBackground: Puberty is a complex biopsychosocial process that is linked to an array of psychiatric and medical disorders that emerge in adolescence and persist across the lifespan. Although the pubertal process is driven by neuroendocrine changes, few quantitative genetic studies have directly measured puberty-relevant hormones. Hair samples can now be assayed for accumulation of hormones over several months. In contrast to more conventional salivary measures, hair measures are not confounded by diurnal variation or hormonal reactivity.Methods: In an ethnically and socioeconomically diverse sample of 1,286 child and adolescent twins and multiples from 672 unique families, we estimated genetic and environmental influences on concentrations of testosterone, DHEA, and progesterone in hair across the period of 8 to 18 years of age.Results: We identified sex-specific developmental windows of maximal heritability in each hormone. Peak heritability for DHEA occurred at age 9.8 years for males and 10.0 years for females. Peak heritability for testosterone occurred at age 12.5 and 15.2 years for males and females, respectively. Peak heritability for male progesterone occurred at 11.2 years, while the heritability of female progesterone remained uniformly low.Conclusion: This is the first study of genetic influences on pubertal hormone concentrations in human hair and is the largest of the heritability of pubertal hormones in any form. The identification of specific developmental windows when genetic signals for hormones are maximized has critical implications for well-informed models of hormone-behavior associations in childhood and adolescence.


2016 ◽  
Vol 106 (4) ◽  
pp. 905-929 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aolin Wang ◽  
Amy Padula ◽  
Marina Sirota ◽  
Tracey J. Woodruff

Author(s):  
A. González-Angulo ◽  
S. Armendares-Sagrera ◽  
I. Ruíz de Chávez ◽  
H. Marquez-Monter ◽  
R. Aznar

It is a well documented fact that endometrial hyperplasia and adenocarcinoma may develop in women with Turner's syndrome who had received unopposed estrogen treatment (1), as well as in normal women under contraceptive medication with the sequential regime (2). The purpose of the present study was to characterize the possible changes in surface and glandular epithelium in these women who were treated with a sequential regime for a period of between three and eight years. The aim was to find organelle modifications which may lead to the understanding of the biology of an endometrium under exogenous hormone stimulation. Light microscopy examination of endometrial biopsies of nine patients disclosed a proliferative pattern; in two of these, there was focal hyperplasia. With the scanning electron microscope the surface epithelium in all biopsies showed secretory cells with microvilli alternating with non secretory ciliated cells. Regardless of the day of the cycle all biopsies disclosed a large number of secretory cells rich in microvilli (fig.l) with long and slender projections some of which were branching (fig. 2).


2015 ◽  
Vol 223 (3) ◽  
pp. 151-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nina Schweinfurth ◽  
Undine E. Lang

Abstract. In the development of new psychiatric drugs and the exploration of their efficacy, behavioral testing in mice has always shown to be an inevitable procedure. By studying the behavior of mice, diverse pathophysiological processes leading to depression, anxiety, and sickness behavior have been revealed. Moreover, laboratory research in animals increased at least the knowledge about the involvement of a multitude of genes in anxiety and depression. However, multiple new possibilities to study human behavior have been developed recently and improved and enable a direct acquisition of human epigenetic, imaging, and neurotransmission data on psychiatric pathologies. In human beings, the high influence of environmental and resilience factors gained scientific importance during the last years as the search for key genes in the development of affective and anxiety disorders has not been successful. However, environmental influences in human beings themselves might be better understood and controllable than in mice, where environmental influences might be as complex and subtle. The increasing possibilities in clinical research and the knowledge about the complexity of environmental influences and interferences in animal trials, which had been underestimated yet, question more and more to what extent findings from laboratory animal research translate to human conditions. However, new developments in behavioral testing of mice involve the animals’ welfare and show that housing conditions of laboratory mice can be markedly improved without affecting the standardization of results.


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