Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (May 2024)

MSC-derived exosomes mitigate cadmium-induced male reproductive injury by ameliorating DNA damage and autophagic flux

  • Zhihong Chen,
  • Jiahui Mo,
  • Qiyun Yang,
  • Zexin Guo,
  • Xinyu Li,
  • Dongmei Xie,
  • Chunhua Deng

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 276
p. 116306

Abstract

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Cadmium, an environmental toxicant, severely impairs male reproductive functions and currently lacks effective clinical treatments. Mesenchymal stem cell-derived exosomes (MSC-Exos) are increasingly recognized as a potential alternative to whole-cell therapy for tissue injury and regeneration. This study aims to investigate the protective effects of MSC-Exos against cadmium toxicity on male reproduction. Our findings reveal that MSC-Exos treatment significantly promotes spermatogenesis, improves sperm quality, and reduces germ cell apoptosis in cadmium-exposed mice. Mechanistically, MSC-Exos dramatically mitigate cadmium-induced cell apoptosis in a spermatogonia cell line (GC-1 spg) in vitro by reducing DNA damage and promoting autophagic flux. These results suggest that MSC-Exos have a protective effect on cadmium-induced germ cell apoptosis by ameliorating DNA damage and autophagy flux, demonstrating the therapeutic potential of MSC-Exos for cadmium toxicity on male reproduction.

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