Glyphosate. Evidence of contributing to the decline of human health. (Glyphosate Series: part 2 of 4)

In the first article, you learned about what glyphosate is and why it’s important to educate yourself on the topic to help you and your loved ones understand a major chemical on and in our food. Glyphosate is sprayed as an herbicide to GMO crops and to non-GMO crops as a desiccant (drying agent). It is a chelator, which binds to essential minerals in the soil preventing the plant from absorbing them from the soil.  It is an antibiotic, which disrupts and kills the beneficial microbes in our guts, as well as the microbes in the soil.

In this article I will dive into research that disturbingly shows how the effects of glyphosate can contribute to specific health conditions. These studies are in animals unless specified…well because we can’t do studies on humans to show harm. Stephanie Seneff, an MIT scientist talks about in her book, Toxic Legacy, how rats and mice have a lot in common with humans when genetics and disease are examined.1 She also goes on to say that through technology, “bioidentical” rodents are created to help study environmental toxins.1 In other words, harm can be discovered through animal studies, and shouldn’t be ignored when applying to humans.

The rise in many diseases such as cancer (thyroid, pancreatic), inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn’s, Ulcerative Colitis), Alzheimer’s, autism, diabetes, kidney, and liver disease all have a very strong correlation with the rise in glyphosate use.2 Very strong correlation, where researchers say “it would be imprudent not to consider causation as a plausible explanation”.1,2

Liver Disease

Let’s first talk about the liver. You or people around you have joked around talking about the liver when alcohols involved.  On a very basic understanding of the liver, most people know that alcohol is somehow flushed through the system by way of the liver. This is true. The liver is our super organ that detoxifies (makes less toxic) or filters out chemicals (among many other functions) and distributes the nutrients to our body that we consume from our food. If our liver isn’t functioning properly, an accumulation of toxins develops, in addition to leaving the body nutrient deficient, resulting in damage to cells and multiple organ systems vulnerable to disease.

Research has shown that glyphosate disrupts the main detoxification system in the liver, depleting our own internal antioxidants (chemicals that neutralize toxic compounds), which induces oxidative stress (toxic compounds that cause damage to cells) that causes fatty liver disease (the same disease that excessive alcohol causes, called non-alcoholic fatty liver disease or NAFLD).3 NAFLD is now a world-wide epidemic and is the most common cause of liver problems.4,5 I mentioned at the end of article one, that glyphosate and other environmental toxins work synergistically (toxicity is amplified when combined).2 A study in 2019 showed that the synergistic effects from those toxins cause liver disease,6 stressing the point that overloading the liver with toxins will lead to enough damage that it cannot overcome. I also want to point out that most pharmaceutical medications are detoxified through this system as well, adding to the liver load. A study in 2020 demonstrated that the severity of liver disease seems to be associated with the amount of glyphosate present in peoples’ urine.7 In other words, the worse the disease, the more glyphosate residues was found in the urine. There are multiple studies that show liver damage can occur with exposures considered to be environmentally safe.8, 9, 10, 11, 12 I leave you with a quote from Stephanie Seneff, PhD in her book, Toxic Legacy, “When we slowly poison our liver, we compromise its ability to protect us”.1  

Infertility

Among the many reasons for reproduction problems, exposure to toxic chemicals is one of them. Let’s take a closer look at specifically what glyphosate is doing with regards to reproduction. We know that most people have glyphosate in the system.  In a study in 2018 of 71 pregnant women tested for glyphosate in the urine in central India, 93% had detectable levels.13 A 2017 study published in JAMA reported 12% of American’s testing positive for Glyphosate between 1993 to 1996 and at least 70% testing positive today.14 We also know that glyphosate passes to the baby in utero15 as well as through breast milk16. Research has shown that glyphosate is an endocrine disruptor, meaning it causes problems or disruption with normal hormone function.17,18 Hormones are released by glands (adrenal, pituitary, pancreas, thyroid, sex glands) into the system, so every single cell in the body is affected.  Endocrine disruptors wreak havoc on our body. In another study, pregnancy complications, including birth defects and miscarriages were more frequent with exposure to glyphosate doses lower than higher doses19, which can occur with endocrine disrupting chemicals. Yes, lower doses can be more toxic than higher doses. Now that’s concerning. Five other studies in 2020 confirmed that ‘glyphosate-based herbicides are endocrine disruptors that decrease fertility when offspring are exposed during critical moments of their development”.1, 20 It also has generational toxicology, which means that the exposure to grandma results in worse and worse outcomes as new generations (second and third generations) are born.21 We as a species are in the second generation of exposure to Glyphosate (GMOs initiated in 1996). I’ll leave you with this from Dr. Zach Bush, MD who was one of the scientists presenting this generational data to the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency). This research showing increasing harm with the second and worse with the third generations born from great grandma’s exposure was rejected by the EPA. They said a law was implemented in 2018 that said they could not consider generational data.  In other words, it is illegal for the EPA to consider generational data.

Neurological Disease

Next, I want to point out research correlating autism with toxic environmental chemical exposure but understand that the cause of autism is multifactorial. There is research strongly correlating autism with three chemicals…aluminum (antiperspirant deodorants), PBDEs (flame retardants) and glyphosate.22 We know that aluminum is a neurotoxin and PBDEs have been studied extensively associating them with impaired neurodevelopment.23,24 Glyphosate by itself has evidence to support its contribution to the rise in autism, demonstrating that it is a neurotoxin.25,26,27 It works together with other chemicals amplifying its toxicitiy.2,28,29 In this example, it helps aluminum get into the brain.28 Remember, how glyphosate is a chelator, which binds to minerals with charge? Aluminum has a +3 charge, which glyphosate (negative charge) encloses, helping it get into the brain.28 In fact, the protective barrier (epithelial cells) that lines our whole body designed to ‘protect’ us from outside invaders, allows glyphosate to freely go into the cell (more discussed on this topic in article 3), causing damage.30

Glutamate is an excitatory neurotransmitter (a messenger) in our brains (responsible for learning and memory) that relies on the mineral manganese to convert it to a non-excitatory state. We know that Glyphosate chelates minerals like manganese, therefore preventing this conversion.2 Glutamate is also frequently used as a flavor enhancer, commonly in the form of MSG (monosodium glutamate), but can also be hidden as hydrolyzed protein, autolyzed plant protein and yeast extract.1 A retired neurosurgeon, Russell Blaylock, MD said that excitotoxins such as glutamate and aspartame are ‘the taste that kills’.1 Studies show that Autistic brains have higher levels of glutamate in their brains and blood.31, 32 Research has also shown that Roundup increased the amounts of glutamate in the brain causing it to be neurotoxic23 in addition to interfering with its clearance from the brain.23

Vitamin B12 (cobalamin, which has a center atom of the mineral cobalt) has been found to be ‘extremely low in animals chronically exposed to glyphosate’.1,33 It’s also been found that B12 levels are low in brains of children with autism, people with schizophrenia and the elderly, contributing to neurological disease.34 It also so happens that B12 inhibits the release of glutamate, thus in B12 deficiency, glutamate levels rise.35 The study of epigenetics looks at how external triggers affects our gene expression, really emphasizes how genes are not everything. Genes are interacting with environmental stressors i.e., Glyphosate, increasing the expression (DNA strands turned on or activated) of those genes associated with autism.36

Autoimmunity

A systematic review in 2012 showed an increase in prevalence and incidence of inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn’s and Ulcerative colitis), including celiac disease (unable to metabolize gluten) world-wide.37 These are considered autoimmune diseases. A study from 2013 compared blood samples (frozen), measuring antibodies for the gluten protein from people between 1948 and 1954 and today.38 They found that the incidence of celiac disease increased 4-fold (400% increase) in today’s group compared to the 1948-1954 group.38 There is also research showing how glyphosate decreases activity of our digestive enzymes that break down our food (lipase, amylase, protease), resulting in disruption of the mucus and intestinal wall features characteristic of celiac disease.39.40,2 Multiple factors can cause this disruption of the intestinal wall or increased gut permeability termed ‘leaky gut’. When increased gut permeability is present the immune system is activated, increasing the risk of autoimmunity.  I’ll go into more detail of what leaky gut is and how glyphosate exposure can be a contributing factor in article 3. 

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References

1. Stephanie Seneff. Toxic Legacy. How the Weedkiller Glyphosate Is Destroying Our Health and the Environment. 2021

2. Nancy L. Swanson, Andre Leu, Jon Abrahamson, Bradley Wallet. Genetically Engineered Crops, Glyphosate and the Deterioration of Health in the United States of America. Journal of Organic Systems. 2014 Jan;9(2):6-37.

3. Mohamed Ahmed Fathi, Guofeng Han, Ruifen Kang, Dan Shen, Jiakun Shen, Chunmei Li. Disruption of Cytochrome P450 Enzymes in the Liver and Small Intestine in Chicken Embryos in ovo Exposed to Glyphosate. Environmental Science and Pollution Research Int. 2020 May;27(14):16865-16875.

4. Rohit Loomba, Arun J Sanyal. The Global NAFLD Epidemic. Nature Reviews Gastroenterology and Hepatology. 2013 Nov;10(11):686-90.

5. Michael Fuchs. Managing the Silent Epidemic of Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease. Federal Practitioner. 2019 Jan;36(1):12-13.

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7. Paul J Mills, Cyrielle Caussy, Rohit Loomba. Glyphosate Excretion is Associated with Steatohepatitis and Advanced Liver Fibrosis in Patients with Fatty Liver Disease. Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology. 2020 Mar;18(3):741-743.

8. Gilles-Eric Seralini, Emilie Clair, Robin Mesnage, Steeve Gress, Nicolas Defarge, Manuela Malatesta, Didier Hennequin, Joel Spiroux de Vendomois. Long-term Toxicity of a Roundup Herbicide and a Roundup-Tolerant Genetically Modified Maize. Environmental Sciences Europe. 2014;26(1):14.

9. Xin Ren, Pengyuan Dai, Aneela Perveen, Qian Tang, Liangyu Zhao, Xiao Jia, Yansen Li, Chunmei Li. Effects of Chronic Glyphosate Exposure to Pregnant Mice on Hepatic Lipid Metabolism in Offspring. Environmental pollution. 2019 Nov;254(Pt A):112906.

10. Breanna Ford, Leslie A Bateman, Leilani Gutierrez-Palominos, Robin Park, Daniel K Nomura. Mapping Proteome-wide Targets of Glyphosate in Mice. Cell chemical biology. 2017 Feb 16;24(2):133-140.

11. Robin Mesnage, Matthew Arno, Manuela Costanzo, Manuela Malatesta, Gilles-Eric Seralini, Michael N Antoniou. Transcriptome Profile Analysis Reflects Rat Liver and Kidney Damage Following Chronic Ultra-Low Dose Roundup Exposure. Environmental Health. 2015 Aug 25;14:70.

12. Robin Mesnage, George Renney, Gilles-Eric Seralini, Malcolm Ward, Michael N Antoniou. Multiomics Reveal Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease in Rats Following Chronic Exposure to an Ultra-Low Dose of Roundup Herbicide. Scientific Reports. 2017 Jan 9;7:39328.

13. S Parvez, R R Gerona, C Proctor, M Friesen, J L Ashby, J L Reiter, Z Lui, P D Winchester. Glyphosate Exposure in Pregnancy and Shortened Gestational Length: A Prospective Indiana Birth Cohort Study. Environmental Health. 2018 Mar 9;17(1):23.

14. Paul J Mills, Izabela Kania-Korwel, John Fagan, Linda K McEvoy, Gail A. Laughlin, Elizabeth Barrett-Connor. Excretion of the Herbicide Glyphosate in Older Adults between 1993 and 2016. JAMA. 2017;318(16):1610-11.

15. Pornoimol Kongtip, Noppanun Nankongnab, Ratanavadee Phupancharoensuk, Chonlada Palarach, Dusit Sujirarat, Supha Sangprasert, Malasod Sermsuk, Namthip Sawattrakool, Susan Renee Woskie. Glyphosate and Paraquat in Maternal and Fetal Serums in Thai Women. Journal of Agromedicine. 2017;22(3):282-289.

16. Maria M. Milesi, Virginia Lorenz, Guillermina Pacini, Maria R Repetti, Luisina D Demonte, Jorgelina Varayoud, Enrique H Luque. Perinatal exposure to a glyphosate-based herbicide impairs female reproductive outcomes and induces second-generation adverse effects in Wistar rats. Archives of toxicology. 2018 Aug;92(8):2629-2643.

17. Eliane Dallegrave, Fabiana DiGiorgio Mantese, Ricardo Soares Coelho, Janaina Drawans Pereira, Paulo Roberto Dalsenter, Augusto Langeloh. The teratogenic potential of the herbicide glyphosate-Roundup in Wistar rats. Toxicology Letters. 2003 Apr 30;142(1-2):45-52.

18. Juan P Munoz, Tammy C Bleak, Gloria M Calaf. Glyphosate and the key characteristics of an endocrine disruptor: A review. Chemosphere. May 2021;270:128619.

19. Saniya Rattan. Exposure to Endocrine Disruptors during Adulthood: Consequences for female fertility. Journal of Endocrinology. 2017 Jun;233(3):R109-R129.

20. Sustainable Pulse. New Studies Show Glyphosate Causes reproductive health damage. July 13, 2020.

21. Deepika Kubsad, Eric E Nilsson, Stephanie E King, Ingrid Sadler-Riggleman, Daniel Beck, Michael K Skinner. Assessment of glyphosate induced epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of pathologies and sperm epimutations: Generational Toxicology. Scientific Reports. 2019 Apr 23;9(1):6372.

22. Cynthia D Nevison. A Comparison of Temporal Trends in United States Autism Prevalence to Trends in Suspected Environmental Factors. Environmental Health. 2014 Sept 5;13:73.

23. Lucio G Costa, Gennaro Giordano. Developmental Neurotoxicity of Polybrominated Diphenyl Ether (PBDE) Flame retardants. Neurotoxicology. 2007 Nov;28(6):1047-67.

24. Julie B. Herbstman, Jennifer K Mall. Developmental Exposure to Polybrominated Diphenyl Ethers and Neurodevelopment. Current Environmental Health Reports. 2014 Jun 1:1(2):101-112.

25. Daiane Cattani, Vera Lucia de Liz Oliveira Cavalli, Carla Elise Heinz Rieg, Juliana Tonietto Domingues, Tharine Dal-Cin, Carla Ines Tasca, Fatima Regina Mena Barreto Silva, Ariane Zamoner. Mechanisms Underlying the Neurotoxicity Induced by Glyphosate-Based Herbicide in Immature Rat Hippocampus: Involvement of Glutamate Excitotoxicity. Toxicology. 2014 Jun 5;320:34-45.

26. Lola Rueda-Ruzafa, Francisco Cruz, Pablo Roman, Diana Cardona. Gut Microbiota and Neurological Effects of Glyphosate. Neurotoxicology. 2019 Dec;75:1-8.

27. Muhammad Irfan Masood, Mahrukh Naseem, Salam A Warda, Maria Angeles Tapia-Laliena, Habib Ur Rehman, Muhammad Jawad Nasim, Karl Herbert Schafer. Environmental Permissible Concentrations of Glyphosate in Drinking Water Can Influence the Fate of Neural Stem Cells from the subventricular Zone of the Postnatal Mouse. Environmental Pollution. 2021 Feb 1;270:116179.

28. Jiaqiang Xu, Gao Li, Zhuoyi Wang, Luqin Si, Sijie He, Jialing Cai, Jiangeng Huang, Maureen D Donovan. The Role of L-Type Amino Acid Transporters in the Uptake of Glyphosate across Mammalian Epithelial Tissues. Chemosphere. 2016 Feb;145:487-94.

29. Ondine S. von Ehrenstein, Chenxiao Ling, Xin Cui, Myles Cockburn, Andrew S Park, Fei Yu, Jun Wu, Beate Ritz. Prenatal and Infant Exposure to Ambient Pesticides and Autism Spectrum Disorder in Children: Population Based Case-Control Study. British Medical Journal. 2019 Mar 20;364:I962.

30. Stephanie Seneff, Nancy Swanson, Chen Li. Aluminum and glyphosate Can Synergistically Induce Pineal Gland Pathology: Connection to Gut Dysbiosis and Neurological Disease. Agricultural Sciences 2015 Jan;6(1):42-70.

31. Lisa A Page, Eileen Daly, Nicole Schmitz, Andrew Simmons, Fiona Toal, Quinton Deeley, Fiona Ambery, Grainne M McAlonan, Kieran C Murphy, Declan G M Murphy. In Vivo 1H-Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Study of Amygdala-Hippocampal and Parietal Regions in Autism. American Journal of Psychiatry. 2006 Dec;163(12):2189-92.

32. Chie Shimmura, Shiro Suda, Kenji J Tsuchiya, Kenji, Hashimoto, Koji Ohno, Hideo Matsuzaki, Keiko Iwata, Kaori Matsumoto, Tomoyasu Wakuda, Yosuke Kameno, Katsuaki Suzuki, Masatsugu Tsujii, Kazuhiko Nakamura, Nori Takei, Norio Mori. Alteration of Plasma Glutamate and Glutamine Levels in Children with High-Functioning Autism. PLoS One. 2011 Oct 5;6(10):e25340.

33. Monica Kruger, Wieland Schrodl, Jurgen Neuhaus, Awad Ali Shehata. Field Investigations of Glyphosate in Urine in Danish Dairy Cows. Journal of Environmental and Analytical Toxicology. 3 (2013): 5.

34. Yiting Zhang, Nathaniel W Hodgson, Malav S Trivedi, Hamid M Abdolmaleky, Margot Fournier, Michel Cuenod, Kim Quang Do, Richard C Deth. Decreased Brain Levels of Vitamin B12 in Aging, Autism and Schizophrenia. PLoS One. 2016 Jan 22;11(1):e0146797.

35. Kun-Long Hung, Chia-Chuan Wang, Chia-Yu Huang, Su-Jane Wang. Cyanocobalamin, Vitamin B12, Depresses Glutamate Release through Inhibition of Voltage-Dependent Ca2+ Influx in Rat Cerebrocortical Nerve Terminals (Synaptosomes). European Journal of Pharmacol. 2009 Jan 14;602(2-3):230-7.

36. James Lyons-Weiler. The Environmental and Genetic Causes of Autism. New York: Skyhorse Publishers. 2016.

37. Natalie A Molodecky, Ing Shian Soon, Doreen M Rabi, William A Ghali, Mollie Ferris, Greg Chernoff, Eric I Benchimol, Remo Panaccione, Subrata Ghosh, Herman W Barkema, Gilaad G Kaplan. Increasing incidence and prevalence of the inflammatory bowel diseases with Time, Based on Systematic Review. Gastroenterology. 2012 Jan;142(1):46-54.

38. Anthony Samsel and Stephanie Seneff, Glyphosate, pathways to modern disease II: Celiac sprue and gluten intolerance, Interdiscip Toxicol. 2013 Dec; 6(4): 159-184.

39. T. Senapati, A. K. Mukerjee AK, A.R. Ghosh. Observations on the effect of glyphosate based herbicide on ultra structure (SEM) and enzymatic activity in different regions of alimentary canal and gill of Channa punctatus (Bloch). Journal of Crop and Weed. 2009; 5(1): 236-245.

40. Lyydia Leino, Tuomas Tall, Marjo Helander, Irma Saloniemi, Kari Saikkonen, Suvi Ruuskanen, Pere Puigbo. Classification of the Glyphosate Target Enzyme (5-Enophyruvylshikimate-3-3-phosphate Synthase) for Assessing Sensitivity of Organisms to the Herbicide. Journal of Hazardous Materials. 2021 April 15;408:124556.

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