Are BPA Substitutes as Obesogenic as BPA?

Archive ouverte

Oliviero, Fabiana | Marmugi, Alice | Viguié, Catherine | Gayrard-Troy, Véronique, V. | Picard-Hagen, Nicole | Mselli-Lakhal, Laila

Edité par CCSD ; MDPI -

International audience. Metabolic diseases, such as obesity, Type II diabetes and hepatic steatosis, are a significant public health concern affecting more than half a billion people worldwide. The prevalence of these diseases is constantly increasing in developed countries, affecting all age groups. The pathogenesis of metabolic diseases is complex and multifactorial. Inducer factors can either be genetic or linked to a sedentary lifestyle and/or consumption of high-fat and sugar diets. In 2002, a new concept of “environmental obesogens” emerged, suggesting that environmental chemicals could play an active role in the etiology of obesity. Bisphenol A (BPA), a xenoestrogen widely used in the plastic food packaging industry has been shown to affect many physiological functions and has been linked to reproductive, endocrine and metabolic disorders and cancer. Therefore, the widespread use of BPA during the last 30 years could have contributed to the increased incidence of metabolic diseases. BPA was banned in baby bottles in Canada in 2008 and in all food-oriented packaging in France from 1 January 2015. Since the BPA ban, substitutes with a similar structure and properties have been used by industrials even though their toxic potential is unknown. Bisphenol S has mainly replaced BPA in consumer products as reflected by the almost ubiquitous human exposure to this contaminant. This review focuses on the metabolic effects and targets of BPA and recent data, which suggest comparable effects of the structural analogs used as substitutes.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Steatosis and Metabolic Disorders Associated with Synergistic Activation of the CAR/RXR Heterodimer by Pesticides

Archive ouverte | Dauwe, Yannick | CCSD

International audience. The nuclear receptor, constitutive androstane receptor (CAR), which forms a heterodimer with the retinoid X receptor (RXR), was initially reported as a transcription factor that regulates hep...

Bisphenol A glucuronide deconjugation is a determining factor of fetal exposure to bisphenol A.

Archive ouverte | Gauderat, Glenn | CCSD

International audience. Previous studies in experimental animals have shown that maternal exposure to bisphenol A (BPA) during late pregnancy leads to high plasma concentrations of BPA glucuronide (BPAG) in fetus co...

Characterization of maternal and fetal bisphenol A disposition in a physiologically-based sheep model

Archive ouverte | Corbel, Tanguy | CCSD

International audience

Chargement des enrichissements...