Bisphenol A-induced oxidative stress, hepatotoxicity and altered estrogen receptor expression in Labeo bata: impact on metabolic homeostasis and inflammatory response

Bisphenol A (BPA), a weak estrogenic endocrine disruptor and a well-known plasticizer, has the potential to perturb diverse physiological functions; however, its impact on immune and metabolic function in aquatic vertebrates is relatively less understood. The present study aims to investigate the im...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecotoxicology and environmental safety 2020-10, Vol.202, p.110944-110944, Article 110944
Hauptverfasser: Mukherjee, Urmi, Samanta, Anwesha, Biswas, Subhasri, Das, Sriparna, Ghosh, Soumyajyoti, Mandal, Dipak Kumar, Maitra, Sudipta
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bisphenol A (BPA), a weak estrogenic endocrine disruptor and a well-known plasticizer, has the potential to perturb diverse physiological functions; however, its impact on immune and metabolic function in aquatic vertebrates is relatively less understood. The present study aims to investigate the impact of BPA on hepatotoxicity, metabolic and immune parameters vis-à-vis estrogen receptor expression modulation in a freshwater teleost, Labeo bata (Cyprinidae, Cypriniformes). The 96-h median lethal concentration of BPA in L. bata has been determined as 4.79 mg/L. Our data demonstrate that congruent with induction of plasma vitellogenin (VTG), chronic exposure to sub-lethal BPA (2 and 4 μM/L) attenuates erythrocyte count, hemoglobin concentration, packed cell volume, mean corpuscular hemoglobin, but not leukocyte number. Further, a significant increase in MDA, concomitant with diminished catalase and heightened GST activity corroborates well with hepatic dystrophic changes, appearance of fatty liver (macrovesicular steatosis) and elevated serum lipids (triglyceride, cholesterol, LDL, VLDL) in BPA-treated groups. Interestingly, a differential regulation of estrogen receptor (ER) subtypes at transcript and protein level signifies negative influence of BPA on hepatic ERα/ERβ homeostasis in this species. While at a lower dose it promotes Akt phosphorylation (activation), BPA at the higher dose attenuates ERK1/2 phosphorylation (activation), suggesting potential alteration in insulin sensitivity. Importantly, dose-dependent decrease in hepatic TNF-α, IL-1β, iNOS (NOS2) expression and nitric oxide (NO) level corresponds well with progressive decline in p-NF-κB, p-p38 MAPK, albeit with differential sensitivity, in BPA-exposed groups. Collectively, BPA exposure has wide-spread negative influence on hematological, biochemical and hepatic events in this species. [Display omitted] •BPA exposure attenuates erythrocyte number, hemoglobin content and hematocrit values.•While it promotes vitellogenin synthesis, sub-lethal BPA alters ERα/ERβ expression.•Elevated lipid peroxidation and oxidative stress corresponds well with liver histopathology.•Chronic BPA exposure induces hyperlipidemia and intense lipid deposition (fatty liver).•BPA suppression of inflammatory mediators, altered insulin signaling indicates liver damage.
ISSN:0147-6513
1090-2414
DOI:10.1016/j.ecoenv.2020.110944