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Gestational exposure to bisphenol S induces microvesicular steatosis in male rat offspring by modulating metaflammation.
Molangiri, Archana; Varma, Saikanth; Hridayanka, Kota Sri Naga; Srinivas, Myadara; Kona, Suryam Reddy; Ibrahim, Ahamed; Duttaroy, Asim K; Basak, Sanjay.
Affiliation
  • Molangiri A; National Institute of Nutrition, Indian Council of Medical Research, Hyderabad, India.
  • Varma S; National Institute of Nutrition, Indian Council of Medical Research, Hyderabad, India.
  • Hridayanka KSN; National Institute of Nutrition, Indian Council of Medical Research, Hyderabad, India.
  • Srinivas M; National Institute of Nutrition, Indian Council of Medical Research, Hyderabad, India.
  • Kona SR; National Institute of Nutrition, Indian Council of Medical Research, Hyderabad, India.
  • Ibrahim A; National Institute of Nutrition, Indian Council of Medical Research, Hyderabad, India.
  • Duttaroy AK; Department of Nutrition, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Norway.
  • Basak S; National Institute of Nutrition, Indian Council of Medical Research, Hyderabad, India. Electronic address: basak.sanjay@icmr.gov.in.
Sci Total Environ ; 904: 166775, 2023 Dec 15.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37660821
ABSTRACT
Prenatal exposure to endocrine-disrupting bisphenol A (BPA) shows a long-lasting programming effect on an organ's metabolic function and predisposes it to the risk of adult metabolic diseases. Although a reduced contaminant risk due to "BPA-free" exposure is proposed, limited data on a comparative assessment of gestational exposure to BPS and BPA and their effects on metaflammation in predisposing liver metabolic disease is reported. Pregnant Wistar rats were exposed to BPS and BPA (0.0, 0.4, 4.0 µg/kg bw) via gavage from gestational day 4 to 21, and effects were assessed in the 90 d male offspring. Prenatal BPS-exposed offspring showed a more obesogenic effect than BPA, including changes in body fat distribution, feed efficiency, and leptin signalling. The BPS exposure induced the adipocyte hypertrophy of visceral adipose to a greater extent than BPA. The adipose hypertrophy was augmented by tissue inflammation, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, and apoptosis due to increased expression of pro-inflammatory (IL6, IL1ß, CRP, COX2) cytokines, ER stress modulator (CHOP), and apoptotic effector (Caspase 3). The enlarged, stressed, inflamed adipocytes triggered de novo lipogenesis in the bisphenol-exposed offspring liver due to increased expression of cholesterol and lipid biogenesis mediators (srebf1, fasn, acaca, PPARα) concomitant with elevated triacylglycerol (TG) and cholesterol (TC), resulted in impaired hepatic clearance of lipids. The lipogenic effects were also promoted by increased expression of HSD11ß1. BPS exposure increased absolute liver weight, discoloration, altered liver lobes more than in BPA. Liver histology showed numerous lipid droplets, and hepatocyte ballooning, upregulated ADRP expression, an increased expression of pro-inflammatory mediators (IL6, CRP, IL1ß, TNFα, COX2), enhanced lipid peroxidation in the BPS-exposed offspring's liver suggest altered metaflammation leads to microvesicular steatosis. Overall, gestational BPS exposure demonstrated a higher disruption in metabolic changes than BPA, involving excess adiposity, liver fat, inflammation, and predisposition to steatosis in the adult male offspring.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects / Fatty Liver Limits: Animals / Female / Humans / Male / Pregnancy Language: En Journal: Sci Total Environ Year: 2023 Document type: Article Affiliation country: India

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects / Fatty Liver Limits: Animals / Female / Humans / Male / Pregnancy Language: En Journal: Sci Total Environ Year: 2023 Document type: Article Affiliation country: India