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E-M:/ Env. and Fertility Center at WSU
- Subject: E-M:/ Env. and Fertility Center at WSU
- From: Mary Beth Doyle <marybeth@ecocenter.org>
- Date: Tue, 27 Jul 2004 17:21:26 -0400
- Delivered-To: enviro-mich-archive@glc.org
- Delivered-To: enviro-mich@great-lakes.net
- List-Name: Enviro-Mich
- Reply-To: Mary Beth Doyle <marybeth@ecocenter.org>
Title: Env. and Fertility Center at
WSU
Just received this
info and thought it would be of interest to folks.
July 20,
2004
Contact:
Jennifer Day
jday@med.wayne.edu
Kathy Fitzgerald
kfitz@med.wayne.edu
313-577-1429
WSU School of
Medicine researcher to establish center of excellence on environment,
fertility
MEDC
provides $1 million for multi-institutional center to study
pollutants' effect on sperm
Just as
DNA fingerprints can trace a person to the scene of a crime, RNA
fingerprints can provide clues to a man's infertility by identifying
the level of sperm-affecting pollutants, including PCBs
(polychlorinated biphenyls), in his system. This is a particularly
important issue in Michigan, which has a large sport-angler population
that consumes PCB-contaminated fish.
With a
three-year, $1 million grant from the Michigan Economic Development
Corporation, a new multi-institution Center for Excellence hopes to
turn the recent discovery of sperm in the genetic material called RNA
into a variety of screening tests that will check men for PCBs,
pesticides and similar pollutants that are believed to impede
fertilization and/or normal fetal development, according to center
director Stephen Krawetz, Ph.D.
Dr.
Krawetz, Charlotte B. Failing Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology
in Wayne State University's School of Medicine, announced the link
between sperm RNA and healthy births in the May 13, 2004, issue of the
journal Nature.
"Following that work, it became quite obvious to
us that the RNAs are likely to provide reasonable markers of paternal
insult. In other words, if something has happened to Dad before he
conceives, it's really going to be carried by the sperm and by these
RNA messages," he said.
Researchers at the WSU School of Medicine and
the center's other two partner institutions - Michigan State
University and the Van Andel Research Institute - are now beginning
to compare the sperm of men who have and haven't been exposed to
these pollutants, which are collectively called oganochlorinated
compounds.
"Here in
Michigan, we have a huge population of sport fisherman, and some 3
million individuals in this state eat sport-caught fish. Compared to
the PCB level viewed as normal, the levels in the real avid fisherman
can be as high as 10-fold that amount," Dr. Krawetz said. "This
assay will give us a way to determine whether consumption of the
organochlorine-contaminated fish are having an effect on
births."
Already,
he noted, numerous reports have associated such pollutants with
increased numbers of miscarriages, low sperm counts and reduced in
vitro fertilization rates.
Once developed,
the fertility-screening tests will have a number of applications, such
as helping a couple plan conception, he said. "If we can identify
alterations in the patterns of these RNAs that are expressed between
an affected vs. a normal individual, then that clearly gives us a good
diagnostic screen to tell a couple in a clinician's office, 'Well,
this might not be a good time for you to conceive.'"
Since men
turn over a completely new batch of sperm every 60 days or so, the
level of PCBs van vary widely from month to month. "That means that
such a test would be able to monitor the elimination of these toxic
compounds or the loss of their effect until he exhibited a normal
sperm profile," Dr. Krawetz said.
Besides Dr.
Krawetz, center researchers include Michael Diamond, M.D., WSU
associate chair of obstetrics and gynecology and director of the
Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility; James Resau,
of the Van Andel Research Institute; and Julie Wirth, of Michigan
State University.
With more
than 1,000 medical students, the WSU School of Medicine is among the
nation's largest institutions of its kind. Together with its
clinical partner, the Wayne State University Physician Group, the
school is a leader in patient care and medical research in a number of
areas, including cancer, genetics, neuroscience and women's and
children's health.
--
Mary Beth Doyle, MPH
Environmental Health Project
Ecology Center
117 N. Division
Ann Arbor MI 48104
734-663-2400 ext 108
734-663-2414 (fax)
www.ecocenter.org