4.7 Article

Analysis of Indirect Biomarkers of Effect after Exposure to Low Doses of Bisphenol A in a Study of Successive Generations of Mice

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ANIMALS
卷 12, 期 3, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani12030300

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Bisphenol A; generations; rodents; blood biochemistry; biomarkers

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Bisphenol A (BPA) is a common environmental and food pollutant that both animals and humans are exposed to. By analyzing blood biochemistry and reproductive parameters, this study found that changes in glucose, total proteins, and albumin could potentially serve as early indicators of health issues caused by prolonged exposure to low doses of BPA.
Simple Summary Living beings are constantly and inadvertently exposed to a series of environmental and food pollutants, triggering effects on health that are transmitted over generations. Bisphenol A is a compound produced in large amounts world-wide and used in the manufacture of plastic containers and other utensils for daily use. It is an environmental and food pollutant with a demonstrated capacity to produce effects on the health of organisms exposed to it. The objective of our study was to identify possible indirect biomarkers of effect by means of the analysis of the blood biochemistry, and of certain reproductive parameters of animals exposed to Bisphenol A in doses considered to be safe over different generations. Our results did not show any modifications in the reproduction parameters evaluated, such as the duration of the estrous cycle, the size of the litters, or the percentage of the young alive at weaning time. However, they showed that there were alterations in biochemical parameters like glucose, total proteins, and albumin, which could therefore, be regarded as indirect indicators of an early effect of alterations in health caused by this compound. Bisphenol A (BPA) is considered as being an emerging pollutant, to which both animal and human populations are continuously and inadvertently exposed. The identification of indirect biomarkers of effect could be a key factor in determining early adverse outcomes from exposure to low doses of BPA. Thus, this study on mice aims to evaluate and identify indirect biomarkers of effect through the analysis of their blood biochemistry, and of certain reproduction parameters after exposure to different BPA concentrations (0.5, 2, 4, 50, and 100 mu g/kg BW/day) in drinking water over generations. Our results showed that there were no modifications in the reproductive parameters evaluated, like estrous cycle duration, litter size, or the percentage of the young alive at reaching the weaning stage, at the exposure levels evaluated. However, there were modifications in the biochemical parameters, e.g., alterations in the glucose levels, that increased significantly (p < 0.05) in the breeders at the higher exposure doses (50 and 100 mu g/kg BW/day in F1; 50 mu g/kg BW/day in F2 and 100 mu g/kg BW/day in F3), that would suggest that the BPA could induce hyperglycemia and its complications in adult animals, probably due to some damage in the pancreas cells; albumin, that increased in the breeders exposed to the highest dose in F1 and F3, inferring possible hepatic alterations. Further, total proteins showed a diminution in their values in F1 and F2, except the group exposed to 100 mu g/kg BW/day, whereas in F3 the values of this parameter increased with respect to the control group, this aspect likely being related to a possible hepatic and renal alteration. Based on these results, glucose, albumin, and total proteins could initially be considered as early indicators of indirect effect after prolonged exposure to low BPA doses over generations.

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