AI Article Synopsis

  • Endocrine disrupting compounds mimic natural hormones and bind to their receptors, leading to uncontrolled cellular growth and associated health issues.
  • Pesticides are a significant source of these compounds, causing cancer and reproductive defects in non-target organisms, which are unintentionally harmed by these chemicals.
  • The review literature aims to critically analyze pesticide toxicity as an endocrine disruptor and discusses its effects on neurological health, genotoxicity, and the biochemical mechanisms behind these toxic effects, specifically highlighting chlorpyrifos and its impact on various species.

Article Abstract

Endocrine disrupting compounds are the chemicals which mimics the natural endocrine hormones and bind to the receptors made for the hormones. Upon binding they activate the cascade of reaction which leads to permanent activating of the signalling cycle and ultimately leads to uncontrolled growth. Pesticides are one of the endocrine disrupting chemicals which cause cancer, congenital birth defects, and reproductive defects in non-target organisms. Non-target organisms are keen on exposing to these pesticides. Although several studies have reported about the pesticide toxicity. But a critical analysis of pesticide toxicity and its role as endocrine disruptor is lacking. Therefore, the presented review literature is an endeavour to understand the role of the pesticides as endocrine disruptors. In addition, it discusses about the endocrine disruption, neurological disruption, genotoxicity, and ROS induced pesticide toxicity. Moreover, biochemical mechanisms of pesticide toxicity on non-target organisms have been presented. An insight on the chlorpyrifos toxicity on non-target organisms along with species names have been presented.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.taap.2023.116623DOI Listing

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