Department of Basic Sciences and Oral Biology, School of Dentistry, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Thivon 2, 11527 Athens, Greece Institute of Biology, Medicinal Chemistry and Biotechnology, National Hellenic Research Foundation, 48, Vassileos Constantinou Avenue, 11635 Athens, Greece.
J Endocrinol. 2014 Jan 27;220(3):207-18. doi: 10.1530/JOE-13-0416. Print 2014 Mar.
Bisphenol A (BPA) is an estrogen-mimicking endocrine disruptor. Early-life exposures to low doses of BPA exert long-lasting effects on animals' reproductive and brain physiology. However, little is known about the effects of BPA on the stress-response system. Given the interaction of sex and stress hormones, we examined the effect of a low perinatal BPA exposure on the function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis at rest and upon application of acute stress. Throughout pregnancy and lactation rats received daily 40 μg BPA/kg body weight orally via cornflakes. We studied the effect of this low but chronic exposure to BPA in the male and female offspring at puberty. BPA exposure led to abnormal adrenal histology including reduced zona reticularis especially in male offspring, hyperplasia of zona fasciculata in both sexes, and increased adrenal weight in female offspring. BPA-treated females had increased basal corticosterone and reduced hypothalamic glucocorticoid receptors (GR) levels. Stressed BPA-exposed females exhibited anxiety-like behavioral coping, a less rigorous corticosterone response, and did not downregulate GR in the hypothalamus, compared with control females. BPA-exposed males exhibited a heightened corticosterone stress response compared with females; they also displayed increased pro-opiomelanocortin mRNA levels and retained the prestress levels of pituitary corticotropin-releasing hormone-receptor 1, compared with control males. We found that perinatal chronic exposure to a low dose of BPA perturbs the basal and stress-induced activity of the HPA axis in a sexually dimorphic manner at adolescence. Exposure to BPA might contribute to increased susceptibility to stress-related disorders in later life.
双酚 A(BPA)是一种雌激素模拟内分泌干扰物。动物在生命早期接触低剂量的 BPA 会对其生殖和大脑生理产生持久影响。然而,人们对 BPA 对应激反应系统的影响知之甚少。鉴于性别和应激激素的相互作用,我们研究了围产期低剂量 BPA 暴露对下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺(HPA)轴在静息和急性应激时功能的影响。在整个怀孕期间和哺乳期,大鼠通过玉米片每天口服接受 40μg/kg 体重的 BPA。我们研究了这种低但慢性 BPA 暴露对青春期雄性和雌性后代的影响。BPA 暴露导致肾上腺组织学异常,包括雄性后代的网状带减少、两性的束状带增生以及雌性后代的肾上腺重量增加。BPA 处理的雌性动物具有较高的基础皮质酮和较低的下丘脑糖皮质激素受体(GR)水平。与对照雌性相比,应激 BPA 暴露的雌性表现出焦虑样行为应对、皮质酮反应不严格,并且在下丘脑没有下调 GR。与雌性相比,BPA 暴露的雄性表现出更高的皮质酮应激反应;与对照雄性相比,它们还显示出更高的前阿黑皮素原 mRNA 水平,并保留了应激前垂体促肾上腺皮质激素释放激素受体 1 的水平。我们发现,围产期慢性暴露于低剂量 BPA 以性别二态的方式扰乱了青春期 HPA 轴的基础和应激诱导活性。BPA 暴露可能导致成年后应激相关疾病的易感性增加。