Potential adverse effects of nanoparticles on the reproductive system

in Lifestylelast month

People often discuss injectables being used to sterilize, but what about your makeup, sunscreen, clothes, or even food?

If you want to understand how the most commonly used nanomaterials affect human reproductive systems, this paper (doi: 10.2147/IJN.S170723) is a must-read: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30587973/

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Nanoparticles (NPs) are everywhere.

• In cosmetics, food, clothing, and medicine.

• Their tiny size (1–100 nm) allows them to bypass biological barriers, like the blood-testis and placental barriers.

But what happens when they accumulate in our reproductive organs?

NPs disrupt the reproductive system at many levels:

• Damage to reproductive organs (testes, ovaries, uterus).

• Harm germ cells (sperm and eggs).

• Alter hormonal balance.

• Cause oxidative stress, DNA damage, and cell apoptosis.


Examples: 👇🏻

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Male reproductive effects:

• penetrate the blood-testis barrier and accumulate in the testes.

• TiO₂ nanoparticles disrupt sperm count, morphology, and motility.

• AgNPs (silver NPs) cause sperm abnormalities, like misshapen heads and motility reduction.

• ZnO NPs induce oxidative stress, DNA damage, and disrupt the testicular barrier.

Female reproductive effects:

• NPs can cross the placental barrier, affecting fetal development.

They also disrupt ovarian function by:

• Reducing mature oocytes.

• Damaging follicles (the structures housing eggs).

• Altering hormonal balance (FSH, LH, estrogen, and progesterone).


Effect on Sexual Behavior:

• PEG-b-PLA NPs disrupt estrous cycles in female rats.

• Carbon nanotubes delay first litter delivery in mice.

• Hormonal imbalances from NP exposure may also alter libido and sexual behavior.

More research is needed here.


Routes of NP exposure:

1️⃣ Dermal: Found in cosmetics like sunscreens and lotions.

2️⃣ Inhalation: Through industrial environments or air pollution.

3️⃣ Ingestion: Added to food and beverages for texture, color, or preservation.


Daily exposure to NPs through these pathways is more common than you think!

Effect on Other Cells:

NPs harm cells supporting reproduction, like Leydig cells in males and ovarian cells in females.

Damage includes:
• Disrupted cell membranes.
• Increased apoptosis (cell death).
• Reduced cell viability and proliferation.


Mechanisms of toxicity:

Oxidative stress: Excessive ROS damage cells and DNA.

Apoptosis: Programmed cell death of key reproductive cells.

Inflammation: Triggered by NP accumulation, harming reproductive tissues.

Hormonal disruption: imbalances that impair fertility and sexual behavior.


Oxidative Stress:

NPs generate ROS, which damage cellular structures.

Effects include:

• Lipid peroxidation (damaging cell membranes).
• Reduced antioxidants like glutathione.
• Accelerated aging of germ and reproductive cells.


DNA Damage:

• ROS from NPs leads to DNA lesions in germ cells, impacting fertility.

• ZnO NPs disrupt the blood-testis barrier and damage DNA directly, potentially passing mutations to offspring.


Cell Apoptosis:

NPs trigger apoptosis (programmed cell death) through:

• Mitochondrial dysfunction.
• Caspase pathway activation.
• Cellular stress responses.

This leads to the loss of critical reproductive cells like sperm, oocytes, and supporting cells.


Hormonal impacts: NPs like Ag, ZnO, and TiO₂ disrupt sex hormones:

• Decrease testosterone and estradiol.
• Interfere with FSH/LH regulation.
• Impact the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis.

The effects can cascade into broader reproductive dysfunction.


The Big Picture:

• NPs are present in everyday products—cosmetics, food, and even medicines.

• Their ability to accumulate in reproductive organs poses risks to fertility, fetal development, and hormonal health.


Closing thought: we're screwed.

Find me on Twitter: https://x.com/ShyGuyFitness

(Picture 👇🏻 is courtesy of Pixabay)

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