PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Liver tumors found in mice exposed to BPA

2014-02-03
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Laurel Thomas Gnagey
ltgnagey@umich.edu
734-647-1841
University of Michigan
Liver tumors found in mice exposed to BPA ANN ARBOR—In one of the first studies to show a significant association between BPA and cancer development, University of Michigan School of Public Health researchers have found liver tumors in mice exposed to the chemical via their mothers during gestation and nursing.

"We found that 27 percent of the mice exposed to one of three different doses of BPA through their mother's diet developed liver tumors and some precancerous lesions. The higher the dosage, the more likely they were to present with tumors," said Caren Weinhouse, U-M doctoral student in the School of Public Health's Department of Environmental Health Sciences and first author of the paper published online Feb. 3 in Environmental Health Perspectives.

Mice whose mothers received the highest dosage, 50 mg of BPA per kg diet, were seven times more likely to have tumors than those whose mothers were not exposed to BPA.

The researchers said more research is needed to determine the implications for human health.

"This current study showing liver tumors in mice says let's take another look at BPA and cancer in humans," Weinhouse said, adding that next the lab will look for biomarkers in the mice genes that may signal risk for disease before it develops, and then try to see if similar characteristics are found in humans.

Bisphenol A, or BPA, is a chemical most commonly found in plastics, cash register receipts and the lining of food cans. It once was used in hard plastic bottles, including baby bottles, but many companies have removed it as concerns about health effects have been raised in recent years. Studies have estimated that at least 90 percent of Americans have some level of BPA in their bodies.

Previous research has found precancerous lesions associated with BPA exposure but the U-M study is the first statistically significant finding of clinically evident tumors in any organ, said Dana Dolinoy, the John G. Searle Assistant Professor of Environmental Health Sciences and senior/corresponding author of the study. Specifically, the researchers found that adult offspring of exposed mothers had an increase in liver tumors.

Dolinoy said another interesting finding in their research is that tumor development didn't discriminate by sex.

"In general, females are at lower risk of spontaneous development of liver cancer," she said. "That distinction was erased in this study, with both males and females showing tumors."

The researchers fed 6-week-old female mice diets containing one of three environmentally relevant doses of BPA prior to mating, then throughout pregnancy and nursing. They then took one male and one female from each litter and followed them through to 10 months.

Another point of interest in their research, Dolinoy said, is that most other small animal studies have involved direct exposure to BPA. In this research, it was the mothers who were exposed before conception. The offspring, therefore, were exposed as developing fetuses and pups, not as adults.

"A previous study that exposed adult mice to much higher doses of BPA did not show the same link to cancer development," she said. "This tells us the timing of exposure and the dosage are extremely critical in evaluating study outcomes."

One year ago, Dolinoy's lab found BPA in human fetal liver tissue, demonstrating that there is considerable exposure to the chemical during pregnancy. In that study, they also found a proportionately higher concentration of free BPA—as opposed to conjugated forms modified by the body for elimination—showing that the ability to flush the chemical from the body is not the same in fetuses as in adults.

INFORMATION:

The current research was supported by the Michigan Nutrition Research Obesity Center, National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Core Center of Excellence, Children's Environmental Health Formative Center and an NIEHS Institutional Training Grant.

Other authors were Olivia Anderson and Ingrid Bergin from U-M, and David Vandenbergh Joseph Gyekis, Marc Dingman and Jingyun Yang from Pennsylvania State University.

Related study: http://bit.ly/KQWFPU

Human fetal liver study: http://bit.ly/1dV3ixz

U-M School of Public Health: http://www.sph.umich.edu/index.html

Dolinoy Lab: http://research.sph.umich.edu/group.cfm?deptID=2&groupID=32

Dana Dolinoy: http://www.sph.umich.edu/iscr/faculty/profile.cfm?uniqname=ddolinoy

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Whether your lose or gain weight depends on weekdays

2014-02-03
There are sleep cycles and there are also weight loss cycles. Almost everyone loses weight on weekdays and gains weight on ...

Single-sex education unlikely to offer advantage over coed schools, research finds

2014-02-03
WASHINGTON - Single-sex education does not educate girls and ...

Fruit flies reveal normal function of a gene mutated in spinocerebellar ataxia type 7

2014-02-01
KANSAS CITY, MO—Disruptive clumps of mutated protein are often blamed for clogging cells and interfering with brain function in patients with the neurodegenerative ...

DNA of peanut-allergic kids changes with immune therapy, Stanford/Packard study finds

2014-02-01
STANFORD, Calif. — Treating a peanut allergy with oral immunotherapy changes the DNA of the patient's immune cells, according to a new study from the Stanford University ...

Studies find new links between sleep duration and depression

2014-02-01
DARIEN, IL – A genetic study of adult twins and a community-based study of adolescents both report novel links ...

Caring for animals may correlate with positive traits in young adults

2014-02-01
NORTH GRAFTON, Mass. (January 31, 2014)—Young adults who care for an animal may have stronger social relationships and connection to their communities, according ...

Dartmouth scientists develop protocol to harvest mouse cell lines for melanoma research

2014-02-01
Dartmouth researchers have developed a protocol that permits cells harvested from melanoma tumors in mice to grow readily in cell culture. Their ...

NASA catches Tropical Depression Kajiki over central Philippines

2014-02-01
Tropical Storm Kajiki developed from the second tropical depression of the Northwestern Pacific Ocean season and quickly moved over the central Philippines. NASA's Aqua satellite passed overhead ...

NASA's Aqua satellite sees System 91S struggling

2014-02-01
NASA's Aqua satellite provided infrared data on System 91S in the Mozambique Channel that showed a system battered by wind shear, stretched out, with broken convection. A false-colored infrared image was created ...

Dormant prostate cancer cells may be reawakened by factors produced in inflammatory cells

2014-02-01
LOS ANGELES (Jan. 31, 2014) – Researchers in the Cedars-Sinai Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute discovered in pre-clinical models that dormant prostate cancer ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Six University of Tennessee faculty among world’s most highly cited researchers

A type of immune cell could hold a key to preventing scar tissue buildup in wounds

Mountains as water towers: New research highlights warming differences between high and low elevations

University of Tennessee secures $1 million NSF grant to build semiconductor workforce pipeline

Biochar shows powerful potential to build cleaner and more sustainable cities worldwide

UT Health San Antonio leads $4 million study on glucagon hormone’s role in diabetes, obesity

65-year-old framework challenged by modern research

AI tool helps visually impaired users ‘feel’ where objects are in real time

Collaborating minds think alike, processing information in similar ways in a shared task

Routine first trimester ultrasounds lead to earlier detection of fetal anomalies

Royal recognition for university’s dementia work

It’s a bird, it’s a drone, it’s both: AI tech monitors turkey behavior

Bormioli Luigi renews LionGlass deal with Penn State after successful trial run

Are developers prepared to control super-intelligent AI?

A step toward practical photonic quantum neural networks

Study identifies target for disease hyper progression after immunotherapy in kidney cancer

Concordia researchers identify key marker linking coronary artery disease to cognitive decline

HER2-targeted therapy shows promising results in rare bile duct cancers

Metabolic roots of memory loss

Clinical outcomes and in-hospital mortality rate following heart valve replacements at a tertiary-care hospital

Too sick to socialize: How the brain and immune system promote staying in bed

Seal milk more refined than breast milk

Veterans with cardiometabolic conditions face significant risk of dying during extreme heat events

How plants search for nutrients

Prefrontal cortex reaches back into the brain to shape how other regions function

Much-needed new drug approved for deadliest blood cancer

American College of Lifestyle Medicine publishes official position on lifestyle medicine as a framework for delivery of high-value, whole-person care

Hospital infections associated with higher risk of dementia

Thyroid dysfunction during pregnancy may increase autism risk in children

Cross-national willingness to share

[Press-News.org] Liver tumors found in mice exposed to BPA