Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Gonadorelin

GnRH, Luteinizing Hormone-Releasing Hormone, LHRH, Factrel

Quick Stats
Studies 192
Trials 100
2025 pubmed

Nanoplastics and chain-length-dependent PFCs disrupt reproductive endocrinology by targeting the PKC - GnRH signaling axis.

Li. Xi X; Fang. Yuying Y; Song. Jinxi J; Sha. Haichao H; Zhang. Le L; Li. Qi Q

Key Findings

  • Nanoplastics are more toxic than microplastics in the tested organism.
  • PFOS is far more harmful than PFBS, and its toxicity is amplified when combined with nanoplastics.
  • Both PFOS and PFBS interfere with protein kinase C, disrupting calcium signaling and mitochondrial function, which impairs reproduction.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers or self‑directed health optimizers, this research offers no actionable guidance on using gonadorelin or improving longevity, metabolic health, or performance. It mainly highlights environmental risks of plastic pollutants, which may be relevant for broader lifestyle or environmental choices but not for peptide protocols.

Summary

The study shows that tiny plastic particles and certain fluorinated chemicals can harm the reproductive system of tiny aquatic animals by messing up cell signaling pathways, especially those involving protein kinase C and GnRH signals. However, it does not provide any information about using the peptide gonadorelin for health or performance.

Abstract

Nanoplastics (NPs) and microplastics (MPs) are widespread in aquatic ecosystems and frequently co-occurred with perfluorinated compounds (PFCs), yet their combined toxic effects remain poorly understood. Here, we investigated the combined toxicity of both nano- and micro-sized polystyrene (PS) and two PFCs [perfluorooctanesulphonic acid (PFOS) and perfluorobutane sulfonate (PFBS)] to Brachionus calyciflorus. PFOS exerted markedly higher toxicity effects than PFBS. Both nano-sized (50 nm) and micro-sized (1 μm) PS were examined, and the results showed that particle size strongly modulated toxic outcomes, with nanoplastics producing more pronounced effects than microplastics. Co-exposure to nanoplastics significantly enhanced PFOS reproductive toxicity by promoting oxidative stress and altering reproductive modes, whereas PS combined with PFBS showed no significant synergistic toxicity. Transcriptomic and molecular docking analyses further revealed that both PFOS and PFBS targeted protein kinase C (PKC), implicating disrupted calcium signaling and mitochondrial function as key drivers of reproductive impairment. These findings reveal a novel mode of reproductive toxicity induced by PFCs in invertebrates and highlight the importance of monitoring emerging fluorinated contaminants in combination with nanoplastics.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2025

Date

2025-10-03T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.ecoenv.2025.119103

References

63