Robert G. Berger
McMaster University
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Featured researches published by Robert G. Berger.
Reproductive Toxicology | 2010
Robert G. Berger; Warren G. Foster; Denys deCatanzaro
Bisphenol-A (BPA) has estrogenic properties both in vitro and in vivo. We investigated its impacts upon uterine morphology and estrogen and progesterone receptors after injection on gestational days 1-4 in doses known to disrupt pregnancy. Blastocyst implantation was significantly reduced by doses of 6.75 and 10.125 mg/animal. Uterine luminal area expanded substantially in response to increasing doses of BPA. Luminal epithelial cell height increased following exposure to 10.125 mg/animal, whereas there were no differences in the number of corpora lutea among conditions. The proportion of cells staining positively for estrogen receptors was affected non-monotonically, showing highest levels at 3.375 mg/animal and lowest levels at 10.125 mg/animal. Similarly progesterone receptor expression measured through western blots related non-monotonically to dose, being highest at 3.375 mg/animal and diminishing with increasing dose. These results suggest that BPA exposure during early gestation acts at the uterus to disrupt intrauterine implantation, consistent with an estrogenic effect.
Reproductive Toxicology | 2008
Robert G. Berger; Jordan Shaw; Denys deCatanzaro
Bisphenol-A (BPA), a monomer used in production of polycarbonate plastics and epoxy resins, has established estrogenic properties. We assessed the impact of acute and repeated subcutaneous BPA administration upon intrauterine implantation of fertilized ova and urinary levels of 17beta-estradiol and progesterone in inseminated female mice. In Experiment 1, females received varied doses of BPA on days 1-4 of gestation. Daily doses of 6.75 and 10.125mg/animal significantly reduced the number of implantation sites. Urinary progesterone was significantly reduced by the higher dose, but no other dose had an effect on progesterone levels and no dose altered estradiol levels. In Experiment 2, inseminated females received a single dose of BPA on days 0, 1, or 2 of gestation. A single dose of 10.125mg reduced the number of implantation sites when given on day 0 or day 1, and 6.75mg on day 1 also produced fewer implantation sites, but there was no such effect of any dose when administered on day 2. These data show a lower threshold for BPA-induced pregnancy disruption than previously reported, also indicating effects of just one exposure. They confirm that this disruption is due to the actions of BPA upon implantation sites, and show that higher doses can influence systemic progesterone levels.
Journal of Great Lakes Research | 2009
Julie R. Marentette; John L. Fitzpatrick; Robert G. Berger; Sigal Balshine
ABSTRACT Alternative male reproductive tactics are taxonomically widespread. In such species, parental, or conventional, males express secondary sexual characteristics, court females and guard offspring, while smaller parasitic or sneaker males avoid the costs of courtship and parental care by performing sneak fertilizations. Theory predicts that sneakers will invest more in testes mass and produce more competitive ejaculates than parentals because sneakers always experience sperm competition while parental males experience sperm competition only when a sneaker is present. Here we present convergent lines of evidence supporting the existence of alternative male reproductive tactics in round gobies (Apollonia melanostoma, formerly Neogobius melanostomus), a recent invader in the Great Lakes. Dark morph males exhibited secondary sexual characteristics, were larger and had higher plasma 11-ketotestosterone concentrations than light morphs, while light morph males invested more in ejaculates (both testes mass and sperm density). Both male morphs had enlarged urogenital papillae, but papillae were relatively longer in light morph males. Sperm tail length did not differ between morphs, and sperm from dark morphs swam faster than sperm from light morphs. Our data strongly argue for the presence of alternative tactics in round gobies, support some predictions from sperm competition theory and align with empirical observations in other taxa. For species of concern like the invasive round goby, it is critical to consider such evidence of alternative male mating tactics when constructing population growth models and assessment of invasion success and impacts.
Reproduction | 2008
Ayesha Khan; Robert G. Berger; Denys deCatanzaro
Development of puberty in female mice was examined in relationship with the ano-genital distance index (AGDI), phyto-oestrogen content of diet and exposure to males post weaning. Throughout gestation and post-natal development, females were exposed to a regular diet or a nutritionally similar diet deficient in phyto-oestrogens. After segregation at weaning on the basis of short or long AGDI, an indirect measure of in utero androgen exposure, females were housed alone or underneath two outbred adult males for 2 weeks. Female urinary samples were collected non-invasively throughout this exposure, then assayed for oestradiol, progesterone and creatinine. Females were then killed and uterine and ovarian mass was determined. Urinary oestradiol was substantially reduced in females raised on the phyto-oestrogen-free diet. Oestradiol levels were more dynamic over days in urine of male-exposed females, especially among those on the regular diet. Urinary progesterone was not strongly influenced by diet. Progesterone was more dynamic in urine of male-exposed females, and was generally elevated compared with levels in isolated females, the size of this effect dependent on AGDI, diet and whether the measure was adjusted for creatinine. Urinary creatinine was elevated by the phyto-oestrogen-free diet and reduced by male exposure, tending to decline over days in females exposed to males. Male exposure increased uterine and ovarian mass and was influenced by AGDI in interaction with diet and male exposure.
Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2013
Denys deCatanzaro; Robert G. Berger; Adam C Guzzo; Joelle B. Thorpe; Ayesha Khan
Differentiation of masculine and feminine behavior in mammals depends on perinatal sex steroids. As bisphenol-A (BPA) can be estrogenic and anti-androgenic, we examined impacts of perinatal exposure upon adult sexual behavior and morphology of male mice. In Experiment 1, dams were fed either a high- or low-phytoestrogen diet and received daily oral doses of 0, 0.175, 1.75, or 17.5μg BPA from gestation day 10 through post-partum day 9. Male offspring from the high-phytoestrogen plus 17.5μg BPA condition showed reduced mass of vesicular-coagulating but not other male glands, and showed increased latency to insemination when paired with females. In Experiment 2, these procedures were replicated but with all animals fed the high-phytoestrogen diet and perinatal BPA doses of 0, 17.5, 175, or 1750μg/day. Adult masses of testes and male-accessory glands and levels of urinary steroids were not significantly affected. When males each encountered a sexually receptive female, there were fewer intromissions among those given 17.5 or 175μg and fewer ejaculations among those given 17.5μg, but the 1750μg dose had no effect. Perinatal BPA dosages thus influenced male sexual behavior non-monotonically, with impairment evident in a discrete dose range among males on a high-phytoestrogen diet.
Hormone and Metabolic Research | 2008
Cameron Muir; Treasurywala K; McAllister S; Sutherland J; Dukas L; Robert G. Berger; Ayesha Khan; Denys deCatanzaro
Enzyme immunoassays for testosterone, 17beta-estradiol, and progesterone were validated for human facial and axillary perspiration and compared to levels in urine. In study 1, these assays were applied to samples from preadolescent girls and boys and young women and men. Mens axillary perspiration contained substantially higher levels of steroids than seen in other substrates from men or in any sample from women, boys, and girls. Male axillary steroid levels were very variable across individuals, and on average they exceeded levels in facial perspiration by 90-fold for testosterone and 45-fold for estradiol. Mens urinary testosterone also exceeded urinary levels of the other subjects. In study 2, axillary perspiration, urine, and saliva were collected from young men. Substantial axillary levels of testosterone and estradiol were again observed. Correlations of the same hormone among the different substrates were generally very low, except for a small correlation between estradiol levels measured in axillary perspiration and urine in study 2. High unconjugated steroid content in mens axillary excretions could, if absorbed by women during intimacy, be implicated in pheromonal activity.
Reproductive Toxicology | 2007
Robert G. Berger; Trina Hancock; Denys deCatanzaro
Reproduction | 2010
Adam C Guzzo; Robert G. Berger; Denys deCatanzaro
Hormones and Behavior | 2009
Denys deCatanzaro; Ayesha Khan; Robert G. Berger; Elaine Lewis
Reproduction, Fertility and Development | 2009
Ayesha Khan; Robert G. Berger; Denys deCatanzaro