Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5858400 | Reproductive Toxicology | 2015 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Iatrogenic gestational exposure to diethylstilbestrol (DES) induced alterations of the genital tract and predisposed individuals to develop clear cell carcinoma of the vagina as well as breast cancer later in life. Gestational exposure of rodents to a related compound, the xenoestrogen bisphenol-A (BPA) increases the propensity to develop mammary cancer during adulthood, long after cessation of exposure. Exposure to BPA during gestation induces morphological alterations in both the stroma and the epithelium of the fetal mammary gland at 18 days of age. We postulate that the primary target of BPA is the fetal stroma, the only mammary tissue expressing estrogen receptors during fetal life. BPA would then alter the reciprocal stroma-epithelial interactions that mediate mammogenesis. In addition to this direct effect on the mammary gland, BPA is postulated to affect the hypothalamus and thus in turn affect the regulation of mammotropic hormones at puberty and beyond.
Keywords
DMBAdimethylbenzanthraceneHPOAXenoestrogensGPR30ERRAVPVDCISPNDNMUEDCEPABPAECMEnvironmental Protection AgencyEndocrine disruptorsDESBisphenol-AEnvironmental exposureMammary gland developmentgestational daypostnatal dayPrenatal exposureExtracellular matrixEndocrine Disrupting Chemicalsanteroventral periventricular nucleusDuctal carcinoma in situEstrogen related receptor
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Authors
Tessie Paulose, Lucia Speroni, Carlos Sonnenschein, Ana M. Soto,