Publication | Open Access
Gestational bisphenol-A exposure lowers the threshold for autoimmunity in a model of multiple sclerosis
20
Citations
25
References
2017
Year
ImmunotoxicologyImmunologyImmune RegulationImmunotherapyImmune DysregulationNeuroinflammationInflammationGestational Bisphenol-a ExposureNeurologyEarly Life ExposureNeuroimmunologyAutoimmune DiseaseAutoimmunityBrain-immune InteractionImmunologic DiseasePharmacologyImmune Cell DevelopmentGestational Bisphenol-aMultiple SclerosisMedicine
Environmental and hormonal factors are implicated in dysimmunity in multiple sclerosis. We investigated whether bisphenol-A, a prominent contaminant with endocrine-disrupting capabilities, altered susceptibility in an inflammatory model of multiple sclerosis. We found that gestational, but not adult, exposure to bisphenol-A increased the development of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in adulthood in male, but not female, mice when a suboptimal disease-inducing immunization was used. Gestational bisphenol-A in male mice primed macrophages in adulthood and raised granulocyte-colony stimulating factor and neutrophil counts/activity postsuboptimal immunization. Neutralizing granulocyte-colony stimulating factor blocked susceptibility to disease in bisphenol-A mice. Early life exposure to bisphenol-A may represent an environmental consideration in multiple sclerosis.
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