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From cohorts to molecules : Adverse impacts of endocrine disrupting mixtures

Authors :
Caporale, Nicolo
Leemans, Michelle
Birgersson, Lina
Germain, Pierre-Luc
Cheroni, Cristina
Borbely, Gabor
Engdahl, Elin
Lindh, Christian
Bressan, Raul Bardini
Cavallo, Francesca
Chorev, Nadav Even
D'Agostino, Giuseppe Alessandro
Pollard, Steven M.
Rigoli, Marco Tullio
Tenderini, Erika
Tobon, Alejandro Lopez
Trattaro, Sebastiano
Troglio, Flavia
Zanella, Matteo
Bergman, Ake
Damdimopoulou, Pauliina
Jönsson, Maria
Kiess, Wieland
Kitraki, Efthymia
Kiviranta, Hannu
Nanberg, Eewa
Oberg, Mattias
Rantakokko, Panu
Ruden, Christina
Soder, Olle
Bornehag, Carl-Gustaf
Demeneix, Barbara
Fini, Jean-Baptiste
Gennings, Chris
Rüegg, Joëlle
Sturve, Joachim
Testa, Giuseppe
Caporale, Nicolo
Leemans, Michelle
Birgersson, Lina
Germain, Pierre-Luc
Cheroni, Cristina
Borbely, Gabor
Engdahl, Elin
Lindh, Christian
Bressan, Raul Bardini
Cavallo, Francesca
Chorev, Nadav Even
D'Agostino, Giuseppe Alessandro
Pollard, Steven M.
Rigoli, Marco Tullio
Tenderini, Erika
Tobon, Alejandro Lopez
Trattaro, Sebastiano
Troglio, Flavia
Zanella, Matteo
Bergman, Ake
Damdimopoulou, Pauliina
Jönsson, Maria
Kiess, Wieland
Kitraki, Efthymia
Kiviranta, Hannu
Nanberg, Eewa
Oberg, Mattias
Rantakokko, Panu
Ruden, Christina
Soder, Olle
Bornehag, Carl-Gustaf
Demeneix, Barbara
Fini, Jean-Baptiste
Gennings, Chris
Rüegg, Joëlle
Sturve, Joachim
Testa, Giuseppe
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Convergent evidence associates exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) with major human diseases, even at regulation-compliant concentrations. This might be because humans are exposed to EDC mixtures, whereas chemical regulation is based on a risk assessment of individual compounds. Here, we developed a mixture-centered risk assessment strategy that integrates epidemiological and experimental evidence. We identified that exposure to an EDC mixture in early pregnancy is associated with language delay in offspring. At human-relevant concentrations, this mixture disrupted hormone-regulated and disease-relevant regulatory networks in human brain organoids and in the model organisms Xenopus leavis and Danio rerio, as well as behavioral responses. Reinterrogating epidemiological data, we found that up to 54% of the children had prenatal exposures above experimentally derived levels of concern, reaching, for the upper decile compared with the lowest decile of exposure, a 3.3 times higher risk of language delay.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1312847316
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126.science.abe8244