UMass Amherst-led cross-disciplinary research examines fertility impacts of male environmental exposure
Study broadens look at how phthalates affect sperm and embryo development
A cross-disciplinary team of scientists, led by 91探花 Amherst environmental epigeneticist Richard Pilsner, will use a three-year, $1.6 million grant from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)to expand research into the impact of phthalate exposure on male fertility.
The three-year grant is part of the NIEHS initiative known as (Virtual Consortium for Translational/Transdisciplinary Environmental Research). The program aims to stimulate unconventional partnerships among environmental health scientists in an effort to accelerate breakthroughs in research.
The new award鈥檚 co-investigators are reproductive biologists Pablo Visconti, a UMass Amherst professor of veterinary and animal sciences, and Sarah Kimmins, associate professor and Canada Research Chair in Epigenetics, Reproduction and Development at McGill University in Montreal.
Phthalates are ubiquitous endocrine-disrupting chemicals found in plastics and personal care products, such as deodorant and shaving cream. Virtually all people in the U.S. have some level of phthalate exposure.
鈥淭his is one half of the equation that has been largely overlooked,鈥 says Pilsner, associate professor of environmental health in the School of Public Health and Health Sciences.
鈥淭here鈥檚 been an overemphasis on female reproductive health and environmental exposure, mainly because the women are gestating the baby for nine months. But male exposure has been shown to increase couple鈥檚 time to pregnancy regardless of female phthalateexposure.鈥
The new grant amplifies the 鈥檚 ongoing research, in both human and mice models, into the influence of phthalate exposure on sperm epigenetics and embryo development, which is supported by totaling $5 million. The epigenome represents the chemical changes to DNA and histone proteins that affect gene expression and can be passed on to offspring but don鈥檛 change the DNA sequence.
鈥淲e鈥檒l be able to look at all three epigenetic mechanisms 鈥 DNA methylation, histone modifications and small noncoding RNA regulation 鈥 to build a roadmap, or epigenetic profile, of how phthalates are influencing sperm epigenetics and subsequently influencing reproductive success,鈥 Pilsner says.
The researchers will use samples from Pilsner鈥檚 ongoing Sperm Environmental Epigenetics and Development (SEED) study, a collaboration with Baystate Medical Center鈥檚 in vitro fertilization (IVF) clinic. SEED data points to specific anti-androgenic phthalates that are associated with sperm DNA methylation and diminished embryo quality.
Each researcher will focus on one of three aims that are 鈥渋nterdependent and synergistic.鈥 Pilsner will examine the effects of phthalate exposure on small noncoding RNA in the extracellular vesicles (EVs) of seminal plasma. EVs are tiny components secreted by cells. They contain RNA and proteins that are transferred to other cells, allowing cell-to-cell communication.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been shown that small noncoding RNA is very important for early life development and getting the embryo up to speed,鈥 Pilsner says. 鈥淚鈥檒l be looking at how phthalate exposure could be modifying the RNA in the EVs and how that affects embryo development.鈥
, a leading expert in sperm chromatin, will look at histone methylation in sperm. She鈥檒l locate where histone levels are altered in the genome of mice and men and link the findings to semen and embryo quality, among other outcomes. 鈥淲e have already determined that histone signatures in sperm are responsive to the paternal environment, such as diet, and we look forward to determining how they respond to phthalates and if they are connected to fertility,鈥 she says.
The will focus on the impact of adult mouse exposure to the phthalates DEHP and DBP and their mixture on sperm capacitation, or the physiological changes that must occur for sperm to penetrate and fertilize an egg, and the subsequent embryo development. 鈥淎s part of this cross-disciplinary research, by using an ongoing mouse model of preconception phthalate exposure, we will build upon Dr. Pilsner鈥檚 recent findings showing that preconception paternal anti-androgenic phthalate exposures are associated with diminished blastocyst quality in humans undergoing IVF,鈥 Visconti explains.
The research team concludes, 鈥淭aken together, our ViCTER consortium will provide a paternal perspective on reproductive health by identifying epigenetic signatures associated with phthalate exposures, altered sperm function and clinical outcomes 鈥 with the overarching outcome to provide better preconception advising and/or diagnostics for couples.鈥