Assessment of the impact of direct in vitro PFAS treatment on mouse spermatozoa.
Leah CalvertJacinta H MartinAmanda L AndersonIlana R BernsteinNathan D BurkeGeoffry N De IuliisAndrew L EamensMatthew D DunBrett D TurnerShaun D RomanMark P GreenBrett NixonPublished in: Reproduction & fertility (2024)
PFAS are synthetic chemicals widely used in non-stick cookware, food packaging, and firefighting foam. Such extensive use has led to concerning levels of environmental contamination and reports of associations with a spectrum of negative health outcomes, including testicular cancer and reduced semen quality. To investigate the effects of PFAS on male reproduction, we incubated mouse sperm in a cocktail of nine PFAS at environmentally relevant concentrations before checking for a range of functional outcomes. This treatment strategy was not toxic to the sperm; it did not kill them or reduce their motility, nor did it affect their fertilization capacity. However, we did observe developmental delays among pre-implantation embryos created using PFAS-treated sperm. Such findings raise the intriguing prospect that PFAS-exposed sperm harbor a form of stress signal that they deliver to the embryo upon fertilization.