Institute for Environmental Studies, Department of Chemistry and Biology, VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Obesity (Silver Spring). 2013 Jun;21(6):1084-5. doi: 10.1002/oby.20478.
The evidence that developmental exposure of humans to chemicals plays a role in onset of obesity is convincing, yet controversial as it challenges traditional views on the etiology of obesity. OBELIX, one of the largest pan-European studies researching the obesogen hypothesis, is accruing experimental and epidemiologic data on major classes of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) in both laboratory animal and prospective human cohort studies. Though still underway, this integrated and multidisciplinary project is adding new insights to the weight of evidence for effects of EDCs on obesity. Animal studies indicate divergent sex-specific effects of perinatal exposure on the development of overweight. In vitro mechanistic studies have shown that EDCs enhance murine adipocyte differentiation, an effect that is accompanied by global DNA demethylation. Epidemiological studies have revealed an inverse relationship between prenatal polychlorinated biphenyl exposure and birth weight, and suggest differences in pre- and postnatal exposure on growth trajectories in children.
人类在发育阶段接触化学物质会导致肥胖,这一证据令人信服,但也存在争议,因为它挑战了肥胖病因的传统观点。OBELIX 是欧洲最大的研究肥胖成因假说的研究项目之一,正在对实验室动物和前瞻性人类队列研究中的主要类别的内分泌干扰化学物质(EDC)进行实验和流行病学数据的积累。尽管该项目仍在进行中,但这个综合的多学科项目正在为 EDC 对肥胖的影响提供更多的证据。动物研究表明,围产期暴露对超重的发展具有性别特异性的不同影响。体外机制研究表明,EDC 可增强鼠类脂肪细胞的分化,这一作用伴随着全基因组 DNA 去甲基化。流行病学研究揭示了产前多氯联苯暴露与出生体重之间的反比关系,并表明儿童在产前和产后暴露对生长轨迹的影响存在差异。