Response of the amphibian tadpole Xenopus laevis to atrazine during sexual differentiation of the ovary

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Abstract

Xenopus laevis tadpoles (stage 56) were exposed to 21 μg/L atrazine under laboratory-controlled conditions in a static system. Following a 48-h exposure period at 21 ± 0.5°C during sexual differentiation, tadpoles were fixed, and the kidney-gonad complex was microdissected. Quantitative histological analysis revealed in atrazine-exposed ovaries a significant (p < 0.05) increase in frequency of secondary oogonia. Atresia, or oogonial resorption of both primary and secondary oogonia, also increased significantly (p < 0.05). The results suggest that these primary germ cells, which constitute the total number of germ cells in the ovary for the reproductive life of the organism, were reduced by 20% following a 48-h exposure period compared to 2% in controls.

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Tavera-Mendoza, L., Ruby, S., Brousseau, P., Fournier, M., Cyr, D., & Marcogliese, D. (2002). Response of the amphibian tadpole Xenopus laevis to atrazine during sexual differentiation of the ovary. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 21(6), 1264–1267. https://doi.org/10.1002/etc.5620210621

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