Bisphenol F-induced precocious genesis of aggressive neurobehavioral response is associated with heightened monoamine oxidase activity and neurodegeneration in zebrafish brain

The production and use of plastics and plastics products has increased dramatically in recent decades. Moreover, their unprotected disposal into ambient life sustaining environment poses a significant health risk. Bisphenol F (BPF) an alternative to bisphenol A (BPA) has been extensively employed fo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurotoxicology and teratology 2024-11, Vol.106, p.107402, Article 107402
Hauptverfasser: Bhoi, Suvam, Sarangi, Prerana, Pradhan, Lilesh Kumar, Sahoo, Pradyumna Kumar, Sahoo, Bhabani Sankar, Aparna, Sai, Raut, Sangeeta, Das, Saroj Kumar
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The production and use of plastics and plastics products has increased dramatically in recent decades. Moreover, their unprotected disposal into ambient life sustaining environment poses a significant health risk. Bisphenol F (BPF) an alternative to bisphenol A (BPA) has been extensively employed for making of plastics. Recent reports have documented the neurotoxic potential of BPF through induction of altered neurochemical profile, microglia-astrocyte-mediated neuroinflammation, oxidative stress, transformed neurobehavioral response, cognitive dysfunction, etc. In the present study, our approach was to understand the underlying mechanism of BPF-persuaded genesis of aggressive neurobehavioral response in zebrafish. The basic findings advocated a temporal transformation in native explorative behaviour and progressive induction of aggressive behavioural response in zebrafish following exposure to BPF. Our neurobehavioral findings supported the argument of oxidative stress-mediated neuromorphological transformation in the periventricular grey zone (PGZ) of the zebrafish brain. In line with earlier reports, our findings also showed that heightened monoamine oxidase (MAO) activity and downregulation in tyrosine hydroxylase expression in the zebrafish brain is associated with the precocious genesis of aggressive neurobehavioral response in zebrafish brain. Our findings also shed light on BPF-instigated apoptotic neuronal death as revealed by augmented chromatin condensation and cleaved caspase-3 expression. Further observation showed that the downregulation of NeuN (a marker of post-mitotic mature neuron) expression provided substantial neurotoxicity, leading to neurodegeneration in the PGZ region of the zebrafish brain. These basic findings grossly advocate that BPF acts as a potent neurotoxicant in transmuting native neurobehavioral response through the induction of oxidative stress, heightened MAO activity and neuromorphological transformation in the zebrafish brain. •Bisphenol F (BPF) prompts precocious dawn of aggressive neurobehavioral transformation in zebrafish.•BPF-induced neurobehavioral alteration is associated with increased monoamine oxidase activity and TH downregulation in brain.•Chronic exposure to BPF induces profound oxidative stress and altered glutathione biosynthetic pathway.•BPF-instigated neurodegeneration is linked with heightened CC3 expression and subsequent downregulation of NeuN expression.
ISSN:0892-0362
1872-9738
1872-9738
DOI:10.1016/j.ntt.2024.107402