Publication | Open Access
Sex-specific epigenetic disruption and behavioral changes following low-dose in utero bisphenol A exposure
487
Citations
38
References
2013
Year
Brain DevelopmentEpigenetic ChangeGeneticsReproductive HealthNeuroendocrinologyGynecologyFemale Reproductive FunctionUtero BpaUtero BisphenolReproductive BiologyUtero Bpa ExposureEpigeneticsTransgenerational EffectEnvironmental EpigeneticsReproductive EndocrinologyFetal Developmental ProgrammingGerm Cell DevelopmentSex-specific Epigenetic DisruptionPublic HealthBpa ExposureInfertilityBehavioral ChangesBehavioral NeuroscienceHormonal ReceptorBehavioral NeuroendocrinologyFetal NeurodevelopmentEndocrinologyEpigenetic RegulationEndocrine DisruptorsDevelopmental BiologyUterine ReceptivityNeuroscienceMedicine
Bisphenol A is a widely used estrogenic endocrine disruptor, and in utero exposure has been linked to altered sexual differentiation and behavior, though the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. The study aimed to test whether prenatal BPA exposure disrupts epigenetic programming of brain gene expression. Maternal BPA at environmentally relevant doses produced sex‑specific, dose‑dependent changes in estrogen receptor and DNA‑methyltransferase gene expression and DNA methylation in juvenile mouse brain regions, leading to persistent, sexually dimorphic behavioral alterations that were not mediated by altered maternal care.
Bisphenol A (BPA) is an estrogenic endocrine disruptor widely used in the production of plastics. Increasing evidence indicates that in utero BPA exposure affects sexual differentiation and behavior; however, the mechanisms underlying these effects are unknown. We hypothesized that BPA may disrupt epigenetic programming of gene expression in the brain. Here, we provide evidence that maternal exposure during pregnancy to environmentally relevant doses of BPA (2, 20, and 200 µg/kg/d) in mice induces sex-specific, dose-dependent (linear and curvilinear), and brain region-specific changes in expression of genes encoding estrogen receptors (ERs; ERα and ERβ) and estrogen-related receptor-γ in juvenile offspring. Concomitantly, BPA altered mRNA levels of epigenetic regulators DNA methyltransferase (DNMT) 1 and DNMT3A in the juvenile cortex and hypothalamus, paralleling changes in estrogen-related receptors. Importantly, changes in ERα and DNMT expression in the cortex (males) and hypothalamus (females) were associated with DNA methylation changes in the ERα gene. BPA exposure induced persistent, largely sex-specific effects on social and anxiety-like behavior, leading to disruption of sexually dimorphic behaviors. Although postnatal maternal care was altered in mothers treated with BPA during pregnancy, the effects of in utero BPA were not found to be mediated by maternal care. However, our data suggest that increased maternal care may partially attenuate the effects of in utero BPA on DNA methylation. Overall, we demonstrate that low-dose prenatal BPA exposure induces lasting epigenetic disruption in the brain that possibly underlie enduring effects of BPA on brain function and behavior, especially regarding sexually dimorphic phenotypes.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1