Arambula Sheryl E, Belcher Scott M, Planchart Antonio, Turner Stephen D, Patisaul Heather B
Department of Biological Sciences (S.E.A., S.M.B., A.P., H.B.P.), Keck Center for Behavioral Biology (S.E.A., H.B.P.), and Center for Human Health and the Environment (S.E.A., S.M.B., A.P., H.B.P.), North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695; and Department of Public Health Sciences (S.D.T.), University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908.
Endocrinology. 2016 Oct;157(10):3856-3872. doi: 10.1210/en.2016-1339. Epub 2016 Aug 29.
Bisphenol A (BPA) is an endocrine disrupting, high volume production chemical found in a variety of products. Evidence of prenatal exposure has raised concerns that developmental BPA may disrupt sex-specific brain organization and, consequently, induce lasting changes on neurophysiology and behavior. We and others have shown that exposure to BPA at doses below the no-observed-adverse-effect level can disrupt the sex-specific expression of estrogen-responsive genes in the neonatal rat brain including estrogen receptors (ERs). The present studies, conducted as part of the Consortium Linking Academic and Regulatory Insights of BPA Toxicity program, expanded this work by examining the hippocampal and hypothalamic transcriptome on postnatal day 1 with the hypothesis that genes sensitive to estrogen and/or sexually dimorphic in expression would be altered by prenatal BPA exposure. NCTR Sprague-Dawley dams were gavaged from gestational day 6 until parturition with BPA (0-, 2.5-, 25-, 250-, 2500-, or 25 000-μg/kg body weight [bw]/d). Ethinyl estradiol was used as a reference estrogen (0.05- or 0.5-μg/kg bw/d). Postnatal day 1 brains were microdissected and gene expression was assessed with RNA-sequencing (0-, 2.5-, and 2500-μg/kg bw BPA groups only) and/or quantitative real-time PCR (all exposure groups). BPA-related transcriptional changes were mainly confined to the hypothalamus. Consistent with prior observations, BPA induced sex-specific effects on hypothalamic ERα and ERβ (Esr1 and Esr2) expression and hippocampal and hypothalamic oxytocin (Oxt) expression. These data demonstrate prenatal BPA exposure, even at doses below the current no-observed-adverse-effect level, can alter gene expression in the developing brain.
双酚A(BPA)是一种具有内分泌干扰作用、大量生产的化学物质,存在于多种产品中。产前接触BPA的证据引发了人们的担忧,即发育过程中的BPA可能会扰乱性别特异性的大脑组织,进而在神经生理学和行为方面引发持久变化。我们和其他研究人员已经表明,在低于未观察到有害作用水平的剂量下接触BPA会扰乱新生大鼠大脑中雌激素反应基因的性别特异性表达,包括雌激素受体(ERs)。作为BPA毒性的学术与监管见解联合项目的一部分开展的本研究,通过在出生后第1天检测海马体和下丘脑的转录组,扩展了这项工作,其假设是对雌激素敏感和/或表达具有性别二态性的基因会因产前接触BPA而发生改变。从妊娠第6天到分娩,用BPA(0、2.5、25、250、2500或25000μg/千克体重[bw]/天)对国家毒理学研究中心(NCTR)的斯普拉格-道利母鼠进行灌胃。乙炔雌二醇用作参考雌激素(0.05或0.5μg/千克体重/天)。对出生后第1天的大脑进行显微解剖,并通过RNA测序(仅0、2.5和2500μg/千克体重BPA组)和/或定量实时PCR(所有暴露组)评估基因表达。与BPA相关的转录变化主要局限于下丘脑。与先前的观察结果一致,BPA对下丘脑ERα和ERβ(Esr1和Esr2)的表达以及海马体和下丘脑催产素(Oxt)的表达产生了性别特异性影响。这些数据表明,即使在低于当前未观察到有害作用水平的剂量下,产前接触BPA也会改变发育中大脑的基因表达。