Methoxychlor (MXC), a common insect pesticide used on food crops, may interfere with proper development and function of the reproductive tract, leading to reduced fertility in women, researchers at the School of Medicine wrote in the August issue of Endocrinology.
The researchers found that MXC, which was manufactured as a safer replacement for the now-banned DDT, alters the estrogen-regulated gene Hoxa10 in the reproductive tract and reduces the ability of the uterus to support embryo implantation. The researchers used mice and then human cell lines to confirm their findings.
MXC is a man-made pesticide used to kill flies, mosquitoes, cockroaches and other insects; it is applied directly to food crops, livestock, home gardens and pets. It is one of a large number of chemicals that can mimic the action of hormones and in some instances interfere with endocrine function.
Some of these endocrine disruptors bind estrogen receptors and adversely affect reproductive tract development, which is heavily influenced by estrogen. MXC and other chemicals like DDT have been shown in other studies to induce abnormalities in tissue development and function in the female reproductive tract.
"MXC has an adverse effect on these mice similar to that of DES, a synthetic estrogen," says senior author Dr. Hugh S. Taylor, associate professor in the Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproductive Sciences. "Female offspring of women exposed to DES were more likely to have an abnormally shaped cervix, and were more prone to cancer of the vagina, miscarriages, early labor and other complications."
Other authors of the study include Xiaolan Fei and Hajin Chung.
-- By Karen Peart
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Biophysical chemist Julian Sturtevant . . .
Memorial service scheduled for . . . Robert Abelson
Alumni magazine now reaches every Yale graduate in the U.S.
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