Rebeka da Costa Alves, Carolline Guimarães D Assunção, Érique Ricardo Alves, Yuri Mateus Lima de Albuquerque, Ismaela Maria Ferreira de Melo, Valdemiro Amaro da Silva Junior, Valéria Wanderley-Teixeira, Alvaro Aguiar Coelho Teixeira
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
We investigated the effects of B. thuringiensis-based biological insecticides, XenTari and Dipel, and deltamethrin on the reproductive development of pups of pregnant rats. Twenty 90-day-old pregnant rats were divided randomly onto four equal groups: control group (GC) administered only water; XenTari group (GX) administered 1 mg XenTari (containing Cry1Ac toxin of B. thuringiensis)/100 g body weight; Dipel group (GDi) administered 1 mg Dipel (containing Cry1Aa, Cry1Ab and Cry1Ac toxins of B. thuringiensis)/100 g body weight; and a deltamethrin group (GDe) administered 2 mg deltamethrin (0.08 ml Keshet 25EC)/kg body weight as a positive control. Insecticides were administered by gavage at doses of 1 mg/100 g/day (GX and GDi), and 2 mg/kg/day (GDe) during pregnancy and lactation. Treatment with both biologic and synthetic insecticides reduced the weight gain of the mothers. The biological insecticides reduced the number, weight and length, and increased malformation and mortality of the offspring. In female offspring for all three groups administered insecticides, opening of the vagina was delayed, metestrus was increased and estrogen and progesterone levels were reduced compared to proestrus, estrus and metestrus of the cycle. The ovaries of female offspring of all three groups administered insecticides contained numerous tertiary and atretic follicles, few corpora lutea, primary and secondary follicles, and reduced estrogen receptors compared to controls. In male offspring, all three groups exposed to insecticides exhibited reduced testosterone levels. Histopathological changes in the testes including vacuolation and desquamation of the seminiferous epithelium were observed only in the GX and GDi groups. The number of androgen receptors was reduced significantly in the testes and testicular morphometry revealed reduced tubule diameter, height of the seminiferous epithelium and total tubule length compared to the control. The biological insecticides, XenTari and Dipel, administered in sublethal doses to pregnant rats, caused reproductive changes in the offspring similar to those of the insecticide, deltamethrin.
期刊介绍:
Biotechnic & Histochemistry (formerly Stain technology) is the
official publication of the Biological Stain Commission. The journal has been in continuous publication since 1926.
Biotechnic & Histochemistry is an interdisciplinary journal that embraces all aspects of techniques for visualizing biological processes and entities in cells, tissues and organisms; papers that describe experimental work that employs such investigative methods are appropriate for publication as well.
Papers concerning topics as diverse as applications of histochemistry, immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, cytochemical probes, autoradiography, light and electron microscopy, tissue culture, in vivo and in vitro studies, image analysis, cytogenetics, automation or computerization of investigative procedures and other investigative approaches are appropriate for publication regardless of their length. Letters to the Editor and review articles concerning topics of special and current interest also are welcome.