Publication | Open Access
Maternal and Fetal Exposure to Bisphenol A Is Associated with Alterations of Thyroid Function in Pregnant Ewes and Their Newborn Lambs
38
Citations
32
References
2012
Year
NutritionCaprineEmbryologyReproductive EndocrinologyFetal Developmental ProgrammingLactationFeed AdditiveToxicologyMaternal NutritionPublic HealthThyroid PhysiologyAnimal PhysiologyBpa Risk AssessmentThyroid FunctionAnimal NutritionDevelopmental ToxicologyMaternal HealthMaternal-fetal MedicineFetal NeurodevelopmentEndocrinologyPharmacologyPlacental FunctionTheir Newborn LambsEndocrine DisruptorsAnimal ScienceFetal ExposurePhysiologyEnvironmental ToxicologyThyroid HormoneMetabolismMedicineBisphenol A
The putative thyroid-disrupting properties of bisphenol A (BPA) highlight the need for an evaluation of fetal exposure and its consequence on the mother/newborn thyroid functions in models relevant to human. The goals of this study were to characterize in sheep a relevant model for human pregnancy and thyroid physiology, the internal exposures of the fetuses and their mothers to BPA and its main metabolite BPA-glucuronide (Gluc), and to determine to what extent it might be associated with thyroid disruption. Ewes were treated with BPA [5 mg/(kg · d) sc] or vehicle from d 28 until the end of pregnancy. Unconjugated BPA did not appear to accumulate in pregnant ewes, and its concentration was similar in the newborns and their mothers (0.13 ± 0.02 and 0.18 ± 0.03 nmol/ml in cord and maternal blood, respectively). In amniotic fluid and cord blood, BPA-Gluc concentrations were about 1300-fold higher than those of BPA. Total T(4) concentrations were decreased in BPA-treated pregnant ewes and in the cord and the jugular blood of their newborns (30% decrease). A similar difference was observed for free T(4) plasma concentrations in the jugular blood of the newborns. Our results show in a long-gestation species with a similar regulatory scheme of thyroid function as humans that BPA in utero exposure can be associated with hypothyroidism in the newborns. If such an effect were to be confirmed for a more relevant exposure scheme to BPA, this would constitute a major issue for BPA risk assessment.
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