Chen Fubin, Zhang Huihong, Huang Haiyan, Liu Jianjun, Zhu Wei, Lu Lingeng, Xie Yirong, Li Hongya, Pi Shurong, Zhong Jingyi, Ding Shuren, Zhang Ke, Wu Fan, Zhang Bo, He Yun
Department of Toxicology, School of Public Health, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510080, Guangdong, China.
Food Safety and Health Research Center, Guangdong-Hongkong-Macao Joint Laboratory for Contaminants Exposure and Health, School of Public Health, Southern Medical University, Guangzhou 510515, Guangdong, China.
J Toxicol. 2025 Aug 13;2025:6189790. doi: 10.1155/jt/6189790. eCollection 2025.
Previous studies have identified early life as a sensitive window for BPA exposure that may increase the risk of metabolic disease in adulthood. However, less attention has been paid to the effects of early-life BPA exposure on the pancreas and its relationship to the development of metabolic diseases. In this study, we exposed females to 50 μg/kg/d BPA in drinking water from 6 days of gestation to weaning of offspring mice and administered a high-fat diet after weaning of offspring mice. We found that early-life BPA-exposed male mice gained body weight, had downregulated pancreatic , , and gene expression, reduced β-cell mass, and resulted in abnormalities in glucose tolerance and insulin tolerance, whereas no significant alterations were observed in females. Lipidomic analyses of mouse pancreas using high-resolution mass spectrometry showed that early-life BPA exposure significantly altered the pancreas of offspring males. Lipid profiles of mouse pancreatic ceramidase gene mRNA expression were upregulated, enzyme activity was enhanced, and pancreatic ceramides, especially long-chain ceramides, were increased in abundance, the latter of which was closely correlated with the increased pancreatic MDA content as well as the decreased SOD enzyme activity. Taken together, our results suggest that early-life BPA exposure may increase the susceptibility of mice to a high-fat diet by altering pancreatic lipid metabolism in mice and that there are significant sex differences in this effect.
先前的研究已将生命早期确定为双酚A(BPA)暴露的敏感窗口期,这可能会增加成年后患代谢性疾病的风险。然而,生命早期BPA暴露对胰腺的影响及其与代谢性疾病发展的关系却较少受到关注。在本研究中,我们从妊娠第6天至仔鼠断奶期间,让雌性小鼠饮用含50μg/kg/d BPA的水,并在仔鼠断奶后给予高脂饮食。我们发现,生命早期暴露于BPA的雄性小鼠体重增加,胰腺中、、和基因表达下调,β细胞数量减少,导致葡萄糖耐量和胰岛素耐量异常,而雌性小鼠未观察到明显变化。使用高分辨率质谱对小鼠胰腺进行脂质组学分析表明,生命早期BPA暴露显著改变了子代雄性小鼠的胰腺。小鼠胰腺神经酰胺酶基因mRNA表达上调,酶活性增强,胰腺神经酰胺,尤其是长链神经酰胺丰度增加,后者与胰腺丙二醛(MDA)含量增加以及超氧化物歧化酶(SOD)酶活性降低密切相关。综上所述,我们的结果表明,生命早期BPA暴露可能通过改变小鼠胰腺脂质代谢增加小鼠对高脂饮食的易感性,并且在这种影响上存在显著的性别差异。