| Literature DB >> 25784850 |
Abstract
Perinatal exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) can induce promiscuous neurobehavioral disturbances. Bisphenol A and phthalates are two widely prevalent and persistent EDCs reported to lead to such effects. Parental and social behaviors are especially vulnerable to endocrine disruption, as these traits are programmed by the organizational-activational effects of testosterone and estrogen. Exposure to BPA and other EDCs disrupts normal maternal care provided by rodents and non-human primates, such as nursing, time she spends hunched over and in the nest, and grooming her pups. Paternal care may also be affected by BPA. No long-term study has linked perinatal exposure to BPA or other EDC and later parental behavioral deficits in humans. The fact that the same brain regions and neural hormone substrates govern parental behaviors in animal models and humans suggests that this suite of behaviors may also be vulnerable in the latter. Social behaviors, such as communication, mate choice, pair bonding, social inquisitiveness and recognition, play behavior, social grooming, copulation, and aggression, are compromised in animal models exposed to BPA, phthalates, and other EDCs. Early contact to these chemicals is also correlated with maladaptive social behaviors in children. These behavioral disturbances may originate by altering the fetal or adult gonadal production of testosterone or estrogen, expression of ESR1, ESR2, and AR in the brain regions governing these behaviors, neuropeptide/protein hormone (oxytocin, vasopressin, and prolactin) and their cognate neural receptors, and/or through epimutations. Robust evidence exists for all of these EDC-induced changes. Concern also exists for transgenerational persistence of such neurobehavioral disruptions. In sum, evidence for social and parental deficits induced by BPA, phthalates, and related chemicals is strongly mounting, and such effects may ultimately compromise the overall social fitness of populations to come.Entities:
Keywords: EDC; bisphenol A; brain development; epigenetics; neuropeptides; phthalate; rodent models; xenoestrogen
Year: 2015 PMID: 25784850 PMCID: PMC4347611 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2015.00057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Animal model and human epidemiological studies linking bisphenol A (BPA) and phthalates exposure to parental and social behavioral changes.
| Palanza et al., | CD1 female mice | BPA | Prenatal exposure of F1 offspring to 10 μg BPA/kg body weight (bw)/day or oil by oral administration through the F0 dam from days 14 to 18 of gestation. Some F1 adults (2–2.5 months of age) were also treated with 10 μg BPA/kg bw/day or oil and treatments spanned from days 14 to 18 of gestation. There were thus those F1 offspring who only received prenatal or adult exposure to BPA and those that were exposed to this chemical during the prenatal and adult periods resulting in four different treatment groups. | • F1 females exposed to BPA during the prenatal or adult period spent spend less time nursing and huddling over the pups but greater time engaged in nest building than controls and those that received BPA during both time periods. |
| Della Seta et al., | Sprague-Dawley female rats | BPA | Adult F0 exposure to 40 μg BPA/kg bw/day by oral administration from the day after mating (gestation) through lactation (42 day duration). |
Adult BPA exposure of F0 dams disrupts passive and active maternal care. These F0 females spend decreased time licking and grooming pups and a trend to less ano-genital licking. These F0 dams had reduced duration of time assuming an arched-back posture, which allows pups to suckle. |
| Boudalia et al., | Wistar female rats | BPA | F0 adult exposure to 5 μg BPA/kg bw/day orally from the first day of gestation (GD1) through lactation (Post-natal day, PND 21). |
F0 adult BPA exposed dams did not demonstrate any differences in incidence of resting inside or outside of the nest. Lifelong BPA exposure of F1 dams though resulted in them spending considerably less time outside of the nest. F0 dams did not demonstrate any differences in nursing position • F1 dams spend less time assuming “arched” and “blanket” nursing positions. |
| F1 offspring then treated every two days with same dosing solution as received by the F0 mother from weaning (PND 21) until mating at adulthood (PND 100). | ||||
| Kundakovic et al., | BALB/c mice | BPA | Adult exposure of F0 dams to one of the three oral doses of BPA (2, 20, 200 μg/kg bw/day) from gestational days 0 to 19. |
Adult F0 females exposed to the highest dose of BPA spent more time licking, grooming, and nursing their pups in an arched back position. No effects were reported with the lower two doses. |
| Nakagami et al., | Cynomolgus monkeys ( | BPA | Male F1 infants exposed from gestational day 20 through term to 10 μg BPA/kg bw/day via osmotic pump. |
BPA-exposed F1 male infant behavioral patterns in initiating maternal care became more reminiscent of female infants and subsequently these males were nursed less than control males. F1 females were not examined in this study. |
| Williams et al., | California mice ( | BPA | Two weeks prior to breeding of the F0 dam through weaning at PND 30, they were exposed to 50 mg BPA/kg feed weight in the diet. |
Perinatally BPA exposed F1 males show reduce territorial marking behavior when a control male was present in the testing arena. Perinatally BPA exposed F1 females showed decrease exploratory and increased anxiety-like behaviors. |
| F1 males and females were placed on a control diet at weaning through adulthood. | ||||
| Ward and Blum, | Native blacktail shiner fish ( | BPA | Adult F0 exposure for 14 days to BPA 1280 μg/L water (5.6 μM). |
Adult BPA exposure of F0 fish disrupted normal visual communication signals and abolished species-dependent sexually selected behavioral traits. Hybridization occured between these two otherwise behaviorally isolated species. |
| Jasarevic et al., | Deer mice ( | BPA | Two weeks prior to breeding of the F0 dam through weaning at PND 21, they were exposed to 50 mg BPA/kg feed weight in the diet. |
F1 control and perinatally BPA-exposed female selectively rejected F1 males prenatally exposed to BPA. |
| F1 males and females were placed on a control diet at weaning through adulthood. | ||||
| Razzoli et al., | Pair-bonded monogamous Mongolian gerbils | BPA and EE2 | Adult F0 females treated daily with oral administration of BPA (2 or 20 μg/kg bw/day) or EE2 (0.04 μg/kg bw/day) from day of pairing to day 21 of cohabituation. | • BPA and EE2 adult exposed F0 females showed increase investigation of their F0 control male partner and reduced exploration. |
| Wolstenholme et al., | C57Bl/6 mice | BPA | Prenatal exposure (7–10 days prior to F0 female being paired with a breeder male and for a 2 week duration) and ancestral exposure to 5000 μg/kg fw through the F0 maternal diet. |
Prenatal and transgenerational exposure to BPA increased the amount of time juvenile F1and F3 male and female mice spent investigating a novel animal. F3 females ancestrally exposed to BPA persisted in investigating novel females, suggestive of impaired dishabituation. |
| Porrini et al., | Sprague-Dawley rats | BPA | Daily oral administration of 4000 μg BPA/kg bw/day to adult F0 dams from gestation through lactation (Mating through weaning of pups at PND 21). F1 females were not exposed to BPA after weaning. |
Perinatal exposure of F1 females exhibited reduced amount of time playing with males and engaging in social grooming. Findings are suggestive that developmental exposure to BPA may defeminize select social behaviors. F1 BPA exposed males were not assessed in this study. |
| Dessi-Fulgheri et al., | Sprague-Dawley rats | BPA | Perinatal exposure of F1 females to BPA either at 40 mg/kg bw/day via daily maternal (F0) oral dosing from conception to weaning or 400 mg/kg bw/day from gestational day 14 to postnatal day 6. |
Perinatally BPA-exposed F1 females, especially those exposed to the low dose, demonstrated a masculinized response in play behavior, as evident by their preference in playing with and engaging in socio-sexual exploration of other females. Perinatally BPA-exposed F1 males showed increase play behavior with females. |
| Wolstenholme et al., | C57Bl6J mice | BPA | Gestational exposure of F1 offspring to 1250 μg BPA/kg fw in the maternal diet. | • Gestational exposure of both F1 sexes resulted in increased play solicitations and approaches. |
| Jones et al., | Long-Evans rats | BPA | Gestational (gestational day 7 to PND 14) and lactational exposure of F1 offspring to 50 μg/kg bw/day through daily maternal oral administration. |
Perinatally BPA-exposed F1 males exhibited sexual behavioral deficits as adults. No disruptions were evident in the sexual behavioral of perinatally BPA exposed F1 females. |
| Monje et al., | Inbred Wistar-derived rats | BPA | Neonatal exposure (PND 1–7) of F1 pups to 50 μg/kg bw/day or 20,000 μg/kg bw/day via daily subcutaneous injections. |
Neonatal BPA exposed F1 females had later reductions in proceptive behaviors. Behaviors of neonatal BPA exposed F1 males were not assessed. |
| Panzica et al., | Male Japanese quail ( | BPA | 50, 100, and 200 μg BPA per egg. |
F1 females were not assessed in this study. |
| Estradiol benzoate (EB) | 10 or 25 μg EB per egg. | |||
| DES | 700 ng DES per egg. | |||
| Genistein | 1000 μg genistein per egg. | |||
| Wibe et al., | Threespine stickleback ( | Benzyl Butyl Phthalate (BBP) | Adult F0 exposure to 100 μg/L in the water (0.32 μM) daily for 26 days (threespine stickleback) or 4 weeks (mummichog). |
BPP-treated threespine stickleback fish aggregated in a single shoal that remained at the bottom of the aquarium. Mummichog exposed fish preferred to shoal with smaller size fish. Potential sex differences were not assessed in this study. |
| Betz et al., | Sprague-Dawley male rats | BPP | Five to six week old F0 males were provided 5000 and 10,000 mg/L in the drinking water (0.16 and 0.032 μM) until they were 20–21 weeks of age (15 week duration of exposure). |
Juvenile to adult BPP exposed F0 males displayed aberrant social behaviors. F0 females were not assessed in this study. |
| Lee et al., | Wistar-Imamichi rats | Di-n-butyl phthalate (DBP) | Perinatal exposure of F1 offspring through the maternal diet from gestational day 15 to weaning (PND 21) to: DBP- 20, 200, 2000, and 10,000 mg/kg bw/day DINP- 40, 400, 4000, and 20,000 mg/kg bw/day DEHA- 480, 2400, and 12,000 mg/kg bw/day |
DBP, DINP, and DEHA at several doses reduced copulatory behavior in perinatally exposed F1 males. All doses of DBP, DINP, and DEHA decreased the lordosis quotient in perinatally exposed F1 females. |
| Diisononyl phthalate (DINP) | ||||
| Di-2-ethylhexyl adipate (DEHA) | ||||
| Perera et al., | 87 boys and 111 girls spanning 3–5 years of age | Maternal urinary BPA concentrations | Median maternal urinary concentrations at 34 weeks gestation: 1.8 μg/L (7.9 nM) Median child urinary concentrations at 3–4 years of age: 3.5 μg/L (15.3 nM) |
Linkage of prenatal BPA concentrations and increased emotionally reactive and aggressive behaviors in boys. Opposite effect in girls with increased exposure to BPA correlating with decreased anxiety and aggressive behaviors. |
| Evans et al., | 77 boys and 76 girls spanning 6–10 years of age | Maternal urinary BPA concentrations | Median maternal urinary BPA from 10 to 39 weeks gestation with mean gestational age at collection = 26.6 weeks: 1.1 μg/L (4.8 nM) | • Increased maternal urinary BPA concentrations linked with greater externalizing and aggressive behaviors in boys. |
| Braun et al., | 249 mothers and their 2-year old children | Maternal urinary BPA concentrations | Median maternal urinary concentrations: 1.3–1.8 μg/L (5.6–7.9 nM), as measured at 16 and 26 weeks gestation and at birth | • Linkage of prenatal BPA concentrations (as determined by maternal urinary concentrations during pregnancy) and externalizing behaviors for girls but not boys. |
| Miodovnik et al., | 404 mothers and their 7–9 years of age children | Maternal urinary BPA and 10 individual phthalate metabolite concentrations | Maternal urine was collected between 25 and 40 weeks gestation (mean = 31.2 weeks). |
Linkage with phthalate exposure and later childhood social impairments, including social cognition, communication, and awareness. No associations observed between BPA exposure and these behavioral disturbances. |
| Median BPA concentration: 1.3 μg/L (5.6 nM) | ||||
| Median phthalate concentrations ranged from 1.6 to 430 ng/ml | ||||
| Lien et al., | 122 mothers and their 8 year old children | Maternal urinary phthalate concentrations (7 different forms) | Maternal urine was collected in the third trimester of gestation. Geometric mean range of urinary phthalate metabolite concentrations: 26.8–109.1 μg/g creatinine | • Positive correlation with perinatal exposure to phthalates and delinquent and aggressive behavioral scores. |
| Kobrosly et al., | 153 mothers and their 6–10 year old children | Maternal urinary phthalate concentrations (monoisobutyl phthalate, MiBP, and monobenzyl phthalate, MBzP) | Maternal urine was collected between 10 and 39 weeks gestation (mean = 26.6 weeks) |
Boys of mothers with higher urinary monoisobutyl phthalate concentrations were more likely to show higher scores for inattention, rule-breaking behavior, aggression, and conduct problems. Increased concentration of monobenzyl phthalate was correlated with conduct problems in boys but reduced anxiety scores in girls. |
| Median of MiBP = 1.0 ng/ml (4.5 pM) | ||||
| Median of MBzP = 3.4 ng/ml (13.3 pM) | ||||
Figure 1Steroidogenesis of androgens and estrogens. Evidence exists that all of the shaded enzymes required in the synthesis of these hormones are altered by BPA and/or phthalate exposure.