Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5858614 | Reproductive Toxicology | 2013 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Exposure to bisphenol A (BPA) is implicated in many aspects of metabolic disease in humans and experimental animals. We fed pregnant CD-1 mice BPA at doses ranging from 5 to 50,000 μg/kg/day, spanning 10-fold below the reference dose to 10-fold above the currently predicted no adverse effect level (NOAEL). At BPA doses below the NOAEL that resulted in average unconjugated BPA between 2 and 200 pg/ml in fetal serum (AUC0-24 h), we observed significant effects in adult male offspring: an age-related change in food intake, an increase in body weight and liver weight, abdominal adipocyte mass, number and volume, and in serum leptin and insulin, but a decrease in serum adiponectin and in glucose tolerance. For most of these outcomes non-monotonic dose-response relationships were observed; the highest BPA dose did not produce a significant effect for any outcome. A 0.1-μg/kg/day dose of DES resulted in some but not all low-dose BPA outcomes.
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Authors
Brittany M. Angle, Rylee Phuong Do, Davide Ponzi, Richard W. Stahlhut, Bertram E. Drury, Susan C. Nagel, Wade V. Welshons, Cynthia L. Besch-Williford, Paola Palanza, Stefano Parmigiani, Frederick S. vom Saal, Julia A. Taylor,