Sex-specific impacts of prenatal bisphenol A exposure on genes associated with cortical development, social behaviors, and autism in the offspring's prefrontal cortex.
Songphon KanlayaprasitThanit SaeliwSurangrat ThongkornPawinee PanjabudKasidit KasitipraditPattanachat LertpeerapanKwanjira SongsritayaWasana YuwattanaThanawin JantheangDepicha JindatipValerie W HuTakako KikkawaNoriko OsumiTewarit SarachanaPublished in: Biology of sex differences (2024)
This is the first study to show that prenatal BPA exposure dysregulated the expression of ASD-related genes and functions, including cortical neuritogenesis and development and social behaviors, in a sex-dependent manner. Our findings suggest that, besides the hippocampus, BPA could also exert its adverse effects through sex-specific molecular mechanisms in the offspring's prefrontal cortex, which in turn would lead to sex differences in ASD-related neuropathology and clinical manifestations, which deserves further investigation.