4.5 Article

Neonatal Exposure to BPA, BDE-99, and PCB Produces Persistent Changes in Hepatic Transcriptome Associated With Gut Dysbiosis in Adult Mouse Livers

Journal

TOXICOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 184, Issue 1, Pages 83-103

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/toxsci/kfab104

Keywords

adverse health outcomes; bioinformatics; environmental chemicals; epigenetic; microbiome; toxicogenomics

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01ES025708, R01ES030197, R01GM111381, R01ES031098]
  2. University of Washington Center for Exposures, Diseases, Genomics, and Environment [P30ES007033]
  3. Environmental Pathology/Toxicology Training Program [T32ES007032]
  4. Baylor College of Medicine Gulf Coast Center for Precision Environmental Health [P30ES030285]
  5. University of Washington Sheldon Murphy Endowment

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Recent studies have shown that early life exposure to POPs may have a lifelong impact on disease risk, partly regulated by the gut microbiome. Among the three chemicals investigated, BDE-99 resulted in the most prominent developmental reprogramming of the gut-liver axis, leading to hepatic inflammatory and cancer-prone signatures, and a persistent increase in Akkermansia muciniphila in adulthood. This highlights the importance of exploring the interplay between early life environmental exposures, the gut microbiome, and disease development.
Recent evidence suggests that complex diseases can result from early life exposure to environmental toxicants. Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are persistent organic pollutants (POPs) and remain a continuing risk to human health despite being banned from production. Developmental BPA exposure mediated-adult onset of liver cancer via epigenetic reprogramming mechanisms has been identified. Here, we investigated whether the gut microbiome and liver can be persistently reprogrammed following neonatal exposure to POPs, and the associations between microbial biomarkers and disease-prone changes in the hepatic transcriptome in adulthood, compared with BPA. C57BL/6 male and female mouse pups were orally administered vehicle, BPA, BDE-99 (a breast milk-enriched PBDE congener), or the Fox River PCB mixture (PCBs), once daily for three consecutive days (postnatal days [PND] 2-4). Tissues were collected at PND5 and PND60. Among the three chemicals investigated, early life exposure to BDE-99 produced the most prominent developmental reprogramming of the gut-liver axis, including hepatic inflammatory and cancer-prone signatures. In adulthood, neonatal BDE-99 exposure resulted in a persistent increase in Akkermansia muciniphila throughout the intestine, accompanied by increased hepatic levels of acetate and succinate, the known products of A. muciniphila. In males, this was positively associated with permissive epigenetic marks H3K4me1 and H3K27, which were enriched in loci near liver cancer-related genes that were dysregulated following neonatal exposure to BDE-99. Our findings provide novel insights that early life exposure to POPs can have a life-long impact on disease risk, which may partly be regulated by the gut microbiome.

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