| Literature DB >> 15289160 |
Takayuki Negishi1, Katsuyoshi Kawasaki, Shingo Suzaki, Haruna Maeda, Yoshiyuki Ishii, Shigeru Kyuwa, Yoichiro Kuroda, Yasuhiro Yoshikawa.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine whether perinatal exposure to two major environmental endocrine-disrupting chemicals, bisphenol A (BPA; 0.1 mg/kg/day orally) and nonylphenol [NP; 0.1 mg/kg/day (low dose) and 10 mg/kg/day (high dose) orally] daily from gestational day 3 to postnatal day 20 (transplacental and lactational exposures) would lead to behavioral alterations in the male offspring of F344 rats. Neither BPA nor NP exposure affected behavioral characteristics in an open-field test (8 weeks of age), in a measurement of spontaneous motor activity (12 weeks of age), or in an elevated plus-maze test (14 weeks of age). A passive avoidance test (13 weeks of age) showed that both BPA- and NP-treated offspring tended to delay entry into a dark compartment. An active avoidance test at 15 weeks of age revealed that BPA-treated offspring showed significantly fewer avoidance responses and low-dose NP-treated offspring exhibited slightly fewer avoidance responses. Furthermore, BPA-treated offspring significantly increased the number of failures to avoid electrical unconditioned stimuli within 5-sec electrical shock presentation compared with the control offspring. In a monoamine-disruption test using 5 mg/kg (intraperitoneal) tranylcypromine (Tcy), a monoamine oxidase inhibitor, both BPA-treated and low-dose NP-treated offspring at 22-24 weeks of age failed to show a significant increment in locomotion in response to Tcy, whereas control and high-dose NP-treated offspring significantly increased locomotion behavior after Tcy injection. In addition, when only saline was injected during a monoamine-disruption test, low-dose NP-treated offspring showed frequent rearing compared with the control offspring. The present results indicate that perinatal low-dose BPA or NP exposure irreversibly influenced the reception of fear-provoking stimuli (e.g., electrical shock), as well as monoaminergic neural pathways. Key words: behavior, bisphenol A, fear, learning, monoamine, nonylphenol.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15289160 PMCID: PMC1247475 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.6961
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Figure 1Effect of perinatal exposure (mean ± SE) to BPA or NP (mg/kg/day) on the behavioral characteristics in a passive avoidance test (n = 8/group). Abbreviations: Post, latency during the retention trial; Pre, latency on shock-presenting day. (A) The latency period until the animals completely entered the dark compartment. (B) The frequency of poking into a dark box until complete entrance. (C) The percent duration of poking into a dark box until complete entrance. **p < 0.01 compared with Pre for same treatment.
Figure 2Effects of perinatal exposure to BPA or NP (mg/kg/day) on behavioral characteristics in a shuttle-box avoidance test (mean ± SE; n = 9–10/group). Avoidance learning curves of male offspring perinatally exposed to BPA (A) or NP (B). (C) Percentage of failure of avoidance when an electrical shock was presented for 5 sec among 100 trials of four sessions. Length of latency period associated with a CS (D) and a UCS (E) in four sessions. *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; and #p < 0.001 compared with control.
Figure 3Effects of perinatal exposure to BPA or NP (mg/kg/day) on behavior in the monoamine-disruption test 5.5 hr after Tcy treatment. NS, not significant. (A) Locomotor activity (mean ± SE) after a single injection with 2, 5, or 10 mg/kg/day Tcy (n = 3–4/group). (B) Effect of perinatal BPA and NP on Tcy (5 mg/kg)-induced increases in locomotion behavior in an open-field apparatus (mean ± SE; n = 7–9/group). (C) Effects of perinatal BPA and NP on Tcy (5 mg/kg)-induced suppression of rearing in an open-field apparatus (mean ± SE; n = 7–9/group). The bracket indicates the comparison of offspring exposed to BPA and low-dose NP in the saline challenge. *p < 0.05. **p < 0.01 compared with saline control.