Department of Environmental Medicine, University of Rochester, School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY 14642, United States.
Neurotoxicology. 2012 Dec;33(6):1410-1419. doi: 10.1016/j.neuro.2012.05.014. Epub 2012 May 31.
Endocrine disruption, the guiding theme of the 27th International Neurotoxicology Conference, merged into the neurotoxicology agenda largely because hormones help steer the process of brain development. Although the disruption motif first attracted public health attention because of reproductive anomalies in both wildlife and humans, the neurobehavioral implications had been planted decades earlier. They stemmed from the principle that sex differences in behavior are primarily the outcomes of differences in how the brain is sexually differentiated during early development by gonadal hormones (the Organizational Hypothesis). We also now understand that environmental chemicals are capable of altering these underlying events and processes. Among those chemicals, the group labeled as endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) offers the clearest evidence of such selectivity, a consequence of their actions on the endogenous sex steroids, androgens and estrogens. Two EDCs in particular offer useful and intriguing examples. One is phthalate esters. The other is bisphenol A. Both agents are used extensively in plastics manufacture, and are pervasive in the environment. Both are produced in immense quantities. Both are found in almost all humans. Phthalates are considered to function in essence as anti-androgens, while bisphenol A is labeled as an estrogen. Their associations with brain sexual differentiation are reviewed and further questions noted. Both EDCs produce a wider spectrum of health effects, however, than would be extrapolated simply from their properties as anti-androgens and estrogens. Obesity is one example. Further complicating their assessment as health risks are questions about nonmonotonic dose-response functions and about transgenerational effects incurred via epigenetic mechanisms. All these facets of endocrine disruption are pieces of a puzzle that challenge neurotoxicologists for solutions.
内分泌干扰,第 27 届国际神经毒理学会议的主题,在很大程度上融入了神经毒理学议程,主要是因为激素有助于指导大脑发育过程。尽管这种干扰模式首先因为野生动物和人类的生殖异常而引起了公众健康的关注,但神经行为的影响早在几十年前就已经埋下了伏笔。这些影响源于这样一个原则,即行为上的性别差异主要是由于在早期发育过程中,性腺激素(组织假说)对大脑的性别差异产生的影响。我们现在也知道,环境化学物质能够改变这些潜在的事件和过程。在这些化学物质中,被标记为内分泌干扰化学物质(EDCs)的那一组提供了最明显的证据,证明了它们对内源性性激素、雄激素和雌激素的作用具有这种选择性,这是它们的后果。有两种 EDC 特别提供了有用和有趣的例子。一种是邻苯二甲酸酯。另一种是双酚 A。这两种物质都广泛用于塑料制造,在环境中普遍存在。这两种物质的产量都非常巨大。这两种物质几乎在所有人类中都有发现。邻苯二甲酸酯被认为在本质上起抗雄激素的作用,而双酚 A 被标记为雌激素。审查了它们与大脑性分化的关系,并注意到了进一步的问题。然而,EDCs 产生的健康影响范围比仅仅从它们作为抗雄激素和雌激素的特性推断出来的要广泛得多。肥胖就是一个例子。使它们作为健康风险的评估更加复杂的是关于非单调剂量-反应函数的问题,以及通过表观遗传机制产生的跨代效应的问题。所有这些内分泌干扰的方面都是神经毒理学家需要解决的难题的一部分。