| Their study is the first
to show that chronic exposure to low doses of BPA can impair the growth
and function of adult reproductive cells. The researchers will describe
their findings this month at the annual meeting of the Society for the
Study of Reproduction. A healthy, mature
follicle, called an antral follicle, includes a single egg cell
surrounded by layers of cells and fluid which support the egg and
produce steroid hormones, said University of Illinois veterinary
biosciences professor Jodi Flaws, who led the study with graduate
student Jackye Peretz.
"These are the only follicles that are capable of
ovulating and so if they don't grow properly they're not going to
ovulate and there could be fertility issues," Flaws said. "These
follicles also make sex steroid hormones, and so if they don't grow
properly you're not going to get proper amounts of these hormones." Such
hormones are essential for reproduction, she said, "but they're also
required for healthy bones, a healthy heart and a healthy mood."
BPA is widely used in plastics and is a common
component of food containers and baby bottles.
The chemical structure of BPA is similar to that of
estradiol, a key steroid hormone, and it can bind to estrogen receptors
on the surface of some cells. It is not known whether BPA blocks, or
mimics or enhances estrogen's activity on these cells, Flaws said.
Human studies have found BPA in many tissues and
fluids, including urine, blood, breast milk, the amniotic fluid of
pregnant women and the antral fluid of mature follicles. A national
survey conducted by the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention in 2003-2004 found BPA in 93 percent of the 2,517 people (age
6 and up) who were tested.
BPA has a short half-life, Peretz said, and the
chemical is quickly eliminated from the body. The fact that so many
people tested positive "probably means that we're being constantly
exposed to BPA," she said. The new study found that follicle growth was
impaired after 48 hours of exposure to BPA, Peretz said. Reductions in
three key steroid hormones – progesterone, testosterone and estradiol –
were also seen after 120 hours of exposure to BPA.
The drop in steroid hormone production was quite
dramatic. After 120 hours in a medium that included 10 micrograms per
milliliter of BPA, mouse follicle cells produced about 85 percent less
estradiol, 97 percent less progesterone and 95 percent less
testosterone. Lower doses of BPA had a less dramatic – but still
considerable – dampening effect on steroid hormone levels. And at 120
hours, follicle cells grown in the BPA medium were 25 percent smaller
than normal, the researchers report.
A review of the health risks of BPA by the National
Toxicology Program of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
concluded in 2008 that while BPA has been shown to harm the reproductive
health of laboratory animals in some studies, such adverse effects "are
observed at levels of exposure that far exceed those encountered by
humans."
However, the NTP reported that laboratory studies that
showed effects in animals exposed to low doses of BPA led it to have
"some concern for effects on the brain, behavior and prostate gland in
fetuses, infants and children at current human exposures to bisphenol
A."
The new study points to possible concerns in adults as
well, Flaws said.
"I think there's a need for more studies where people
look in adult humans to see if BPA is affecting follicle growth and
steroid hormone levels," she said. If it is, that might help explain
some infertility or menopausal symptoms, she said.
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