Journal of Andrology, Vol. 25, No. 6, November/December 2004
Copyright © American Society of Andrology
Nickel-Induced Oxidative Stress in Testis of Mice: Evidence of DNA Damage and Genotoxic Effects
KODIPURA DORESWAMY,
BALAKRISHNA SHRILATHA,
THIMAPPA RAJESHKUMAR AND
MURALIDHARA
From the Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition, Central Food
Technological Research Institute, Mysore, India.
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Correspondence to: Dr Muralidhara, Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition,
CFTRI, Mysore 570 020, India (e-mail:
mura16{at}yahoo.com). |
Oxidative stress (OS) mechanisms are speculated to play a significant role
in nickel-induced toxic effects and their carcinogenic potency. Although
nickel-induced oxidative damage in somatic tissues is well demonstrated,
evidence of the involvement of a similar mechanism(s) in nickel-induced
testicular dysfunction and associated genotoxic effects is scarce. Hence, the
present study aimed to investigate the nickel-induced OS response in testis
and the associated genotoxic implications in vivo. Initially, the toxicity
profile of nickel chloride was determined in adult albino mice (CFT-Swiss)
following administration (intraperitoneal) of single doses. Subsequently,
multiple sublethal doses (1.25, 2.5, and 5.0 µmol/100 g of body weight per
day for 3 days) were used to characterize effects on testicular
histoarchitecture, lipid peroxidation (LPO) in testis (homogenates, microsomal
or mitochondrial fractions) and epididymal sperm, DNA damage, induction of
apoptosis in testis, and incidence of sperm head abnormalities. Although
short-term doses of nickel induced only a minimal LPO response, multiple doses
elicited a moderate (15% to 30%) increase in LPO in whole homogenates and
higher dose-related increases in both mitochondrial (20% to 50%) and
microsomal fractions (25% to 60%). This was associated with a significant
increase in DNA damage in the testis as evidenced by increased single-strand
breaks (fluorimetric analysis of DNA unwinding assay). Further, at higher
doses, nickel-induced apoptosis was demonstrable in the testis biochemically.
Although caudal sperm counts determined at all sampling weeks showed no
alterations, analysis for head abnormalities revealed a nearly 3- to 4-fold
increase in the percentage of abnormal sperms among the nickel-treated males
during the first 3 weeks. Furthermore, mating of nickel-treated (2.5
µmol/100 g of body weight per day for 5 days) males sequentially for a
period of 5 weeks with untreated females resulted in a significant increase in
male-mediated dominant lethaltype mutations (the frequency of dead
implantations) during the first 3 weeks, suggesting a stage-specific effect on
postmeiotic germ cells. These findings suggest that testicular toxicity of
nickel compounds may be related to enhanced production of reactive oxygen
species, probably mediated through oxidative damage to macromolecules,
including damage to DNA.
Key words: Nickel chloride, oxidative damage, apoptosis, abnormal sperms, dominant lethal mutations
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[Abstract]
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Copyright © 2004 by The American Society of Andrology.