Gestational bisphenol-A exposure lowers the threshold for autoimmunity in a model of multiple sclerosis

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Abstract

Environmental and hormonal factors are implicated in dysimmun-ity in multiple sclerosis. We investigated whether bisphenol-A, a prominent contaminant with endocrine-disrupting capabilities, altered susceptibility in an inflammatory model of multiple sclerosis. We found that gestational, but not adult, exposure to bisphenol-A increased the development of experimental autoimmune encepha-lomyelitis in adulthood in male, but not female, mice when a suboptimal disease-inducing immunization was used. Gestational bisphenol-A in male mice primed macrophages in adulthood and raised granulocyte-colony stimulating factor and neutrophil counts/activity postsuboptimal immunization. Neutralizing granulocyte-colony stimulating factor blocked susceptibility to disease in bisphenol-A mice. Early life exposure to bisphenol-A may represent an environmental consideration in multiple sclerosis.

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Rogers, J. A., Mishra, M. K., Hahn, J., Greene, C. J., Yates, R. M., Metz, L. M., & Wee Yonga, V. (2017). Gestational bisphenol-A exposure lowers the threshold for autoimmunity in a model of multiple sclerosis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 114(19), 4999–5004. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1620774114

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