Effects Of Fetal Exposure To Heat-Not-Burn Tobacco On Testicular Function In Male Offspring

BIOLOGICAL & PHARMACEUTICAL BULLETIN(2020)

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Abstract
Several studies show that maternal conventional cigarette smoking during pregnancy has been associated with reduced sperm concentration in sons. The development of heat-not-burn (HnB) tobacco has gained a growing following. However, the effects of prenatal HnB tobacco smoking on male offspring are as yet unknown. Pregnant CD-1 mice were exposed to I-Quit- Ordinary-Smoking (IQOS) ( HnB tobacco) aerosol from heat sticks, mainstream smoke from 3R4F (conventional cigarettes) or clean air, using a whole-body exposure system. Adult male offspring mice were divided into six groups: control (5- and 15-weeks-old offspring), IQOS (5 and 15-weeks-old) and 3R4F (5 and 15-weeks-old). Spermatogenesis, sperm characteristics, serum testosterone, and seminiferous tubule morphology were evaluated. Prenatal IQOS exposure increased abnormal seminiferous tubule morphology and decreased sperm production at 5 weeks, but 3R4F exposure did not. Prenatal exposure to IQOS aerosol delays sexual maturation of male offspring or adversely affects the male testicular function of the offspring more than smoke from a combustion cigarette.
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Key words
heat-not-burn tobacco (HnB tobacco),prenatal exposure,male offspring,daily sperm production
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