Abstract:
Endocrine system and nervous system are two major modes of communication that
coordinate and control different body functions. While the dynamics of nervous system
are maintained by conduction of electrical impulses through the complex circuits of
nervous system, the messengers of the endocrine system are hormones that are
synthesized and excreted at very low quantities from specialized glands and transported
to the target organ(s) via the bloodstream. A tuned functioning of endocrine orchestra is
necessary for sustained maintenance of different pivotal functions in human or animal
body like reproduction and development, growth and maturation, energy production,
electrolyte balance, etc. However, increasing scientific evidences depict the existence of a
newly defined category of environmental contaminants which may have diverse chemical
structures and can alter the normal functioning of the endocrine and reproductive systems
(Cargouet et al., 2004). These chemicals mimic/inhibit the actions of endogenous
hormones or modulate the synthesis of latter and have been named as "endocrine
disrupting chemicals (EDC)" (Sonnennschein & Soto, 1998). In this way EDC may
interfere with the usual hormonally regulated biological processes and thus, may
adversely affect the development and reproductive function in wildlife, experimental
animals, and humans (Satoh et al., 2001). In general EDC have been defined as-
"An exogenous agent that interferes with the synthesis, storage/release,
transport, metabolism, binding, action or elimination ofnatural blood-borne hormones
responsiblefor the regulation ofhomeostasis and ofdevelopmental processes".
Depending on the steroid with which the EDC interferes, steroid EDCs can be broadly categorized as (anti)androgenic, (anti)estrogenic and (anti)progestagenic
chemicals. They may enter the body of animals/humans through the diet, contaminated
water or occupational exposure, and then may lead to the generation of an agonistic or
antagonistic effect (Kumar et al., 2008). Once inside the physiological system the EDC
may exert their effect by targeting any of the following steps: (i) through arylhydrocarbon
receptor (AhR) (Indarto & Izawa, 2001) (ii) direct binding of these chemicals to steroid
receptors, steroidogenic enzymes and proteins associated with steroidogenesis (like StAR
protein) (Walsh et al., 2000; Sanderson & Vanden Berg, 2003; Rice et al., 2006), and (iii)
increasing the stability of transcripts and transcriptional rate of the promoter of
steroidogenic enzymes (Lin et al., 2006; Lyssimachou et al., 2006). An increasing body of evidences reveals the association between various
therapeutic/environmental compounds that act as EDC and many sex hormone-sensitive
disease/disorders (Colborn & Clement, 1992; Satoh et al., 2001; Sone et al, 2005;
Guillette, 2006; Massart et al., 2006; Chen et al., 2007). The possibility of various
diseases like reduced fecundity, abnormal fetal development, delayed onset of puberty,
cryptorchidism, abnormal lactation, testicular dysfunction and even various types of
cancers due to the exposure to EDCs have been reported (Sharpe & Irvine, 2004; Roy et
al., 2005; Buck et al., 2006; Darbre, 2006; Guillette, 2006; Maffini et al., 2006).
In the past decade, the utilization of many chemicals (including pesticides and
persistent organic pollutants) has been limited worldwide due to their hazardous
potential. However, the chemicals having endocrine disruption (ED) potential are being used directly or indirectly for various purposes in the daily life leading to a chronic
exposure to them. These chemicals range from the simple household utilities like
detergents, cosmetics and toilet utilities to specialized applications viz. pharmaceuticals,
insecticides and pesticides. Therefore there is a continuous discharge of these EDCs from
various sources - household utilities, industrial and agricultural applications etc. into the
environment without our knowledge of their toxicological potential. Once these
chemicals reach the environment, they become the part of the food chain finally reaching
the animal/human systems. Although the carcinogenic potential of these compounds are
evaluated by routine mutagenicity testing or biophysical tests, the concentrations
necessary to disrupt endocrine regulation may be much lower than that required to act as
a carcinogen. Chronic exposure even in very low doses of these compounds may disturb
the delicate hormone balance and compromise the reproductive health of many species
(Ralph et al., 2003). EDCs have already been reported to be in the food chain and
different strata of environment in various forms like persistent organic pollutants (POPs)
such as the insecticide dichlorodiphenyl-trichloroethane (DDT) and its metabolites, the
industrial by-product dioxins, the industrial compounds polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB),
several agrochemicals, pesticides and biocides (e.g. chlorinated insecticides, organotins,
imidazoles, triazoles, etc.) and other industrial compounds (several phenol compounds
such as bisphenol A) (Mantovani et al., 1999). According to one of the environmental
scientists (Trivedi, 2007) -
"Today and every day, you can expect to be exposed to some 75,000 artificial
chemicals. All day long you will be breathing them in, absorbing them through your
skin and swallowing them in your food Throughout the night they will seep out of
carpets, pillows and curtains, and drift into your lungs. Living in this chemical soup is
an inescapable side effect of 21st-century living. The question is: is it doing us any
harm?"
Once used in various applications and activities, different types of chemicals and
their byproducts are discharged finally to sewage water making it a complicated broth of
chemicals having diverse structures and different effects on biological organization
including endocrine system (Darbre, 2006; Heidler et al., 2006; Sarmah et al., 2006).
Thus sewage water receives a number of chemicals which can be potent EDCs, however,
the rigorous treatment process that is followed in the sewage treatment plant for the
removal of harmful contaminants is found to be ineffective with regard to the EDCs
(Kumar et al., 2008). Majority of the adverse physiological observations in the aquatic
environment concerning the reproductive system, for instance, the feminization of male
fish with sewage treatment plant effluents, are attributed to the presence of EDC in these
discharged effluents (Sumpter &Jobling, 1995; Sumpter, 1998; Ternes et al., 1999). It
has been hypothesized that the statistical decrease in sperm counts over the last decades,
increasing incidents of testicular cancer and other disorders regarding male infertility
might have been caused by the intake of these chemicals via food or drinking water