Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P56851 (epididymal)
11,273 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

m-Dinitrobenzene (m-DNB)-induced testicular atrophy has been attributed to a direct effect upon the germinal epithelium. However, such degenerative changes in the germinal epithelium should induce shifts in the testicular hormonal milieu, which would in turn alter the hypothalamic-pituitary gonadal axis in general. This study evaluated the endocrine status of male rats (killed 3 hr, 24 hr, 1 week, and 2 weeks) following a single oral dose of m-DNB (32 mg m-DNB/kg). Serum and pituitary leuteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and protactin and hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) concentrations were determined. Testosterone and androgen-binding protein concentrations in serum, interstitial fluid, seminiferous tubule fluid, and caput epididymis were also determined. In vitro basal and hCG-stimulated testosterone release was determined in the decapsulated testis. Results of the present study indicate that pituitary hormone concentrations and hypothalamic GnRH were unaffected after a single oral dose of m-DNB. Serum FSH was elevated at 2 weeks. There was a transient decrease in serum testosterone at 24 hr, which returned to control values at 1 and 2 weeks. Interstitial fluid, seminiferous tubule fluid, and caput epididymal testosterone concentrations were increased at 1 and 2 weeks. Basal testosterone release in vitro was increased at 2 weeks, while hCG-stimulated testosterone release was increased at 1 and 2 weeks. Androgen-binding protein concentrations in serum and interstitial fluid were increased at 1 and 2 weeks. Androgen-binding protein was increased at 24 hr and 1 week in seminiferous tubule fluid, but returned to control concentrations by 2 weeks. However, the total tubular content of androgen-binding protein was dramatically decreased at 2 weeks. Androgen-binding protein in the caput epididymis was unaltered following m-DNB treatment. These data demonstrate that m-DNB exerts a direct effect on the testes and not through alterations in hypothalamic and pituitary control of gonadal function.
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PMID:Changes in testicular and serum hormone concentrations in the male rat following treatment with m-dinitrobenzene. 313 88

1,3-Dinitrobenzene (mDNB) is a widely used intermediate in commercial products and causes testicular injury. However, genotoxic effects upon low-level exposure are poorly understood. The present study evaluated the effects of very low-chronic doses of mDNB on sperm nuclear integrity. Male hamsters were treated with 1.5 mg/kg/d/4 wks (group A), 1.5 mg/kg/mDNB/d/week/4 weeks (group B), 1.0 mg/kg/mDNB/3 d/wk/4 wks (group C), or polyethylene glycol 600 (control). Nuclear integrity of distal cauda epididymal sperm was determined using the sperm chromatin structure assay and acridine orange staining (AOS). The germ cell nuclear integrity was assessed by the comet assay. Testicular histopathology was conducted to evaluate the sensitive stages. The comet assay revealed denatured nuclear DNA in group A (in diploid and polyploid cells from weeks 2-5); respectively at week 4 and weeks 3 to 4 in groups B and C. According to AOS, only group A animals exhibited denatured sperm DNA (weeks 1 and 3). The effective sperm count declined from weeks 1 to 6. Mean sperm DNA denaturation extent, percentage cells outside the main population, and standard deviation indicated altered sperm nuclear integrity in group A. Same animals exhibited progressive disruption of the Sertoli cells, while groups B and C exhibited damages on germ cells. The results suggest that mDNB affects sperm nuclear integrity at very low chronic doses targeting cell-specific testicular damage.
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PMID:1,3-Dinitrobenze-Induced Genotoxicity Through Altering Nuclear Integrity of Diploid and Polyploidy Germ Cells. 3157 11