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Citation
Tags
HERO ID
3230343
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Effect of postnatal low-dose exposure to environmental chemicals on the gut microbiome in a rodent model
Author(s)
Hu, J; Raikhel, V; Gopalakrishnan, K; Fernandez-Hernandez, H; Lambertini, L; Manservisi, F; Falcioni, L; Bua, L; Belpoggi, F; L Teitelbaum, S; Chen, J
Year
2016
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Publisher
BioMed Central Ltd.
Location
LONDON
Volume
4
Issue
1
Page Numbers
26
Language
English
PMID
27301250
DOI
10.1186/s40168-016-0173-2
Web of Science Id
WOS:000378620600001
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
This proof-of-principle study examines whether postnatal, low-dose exposure to environmental chemicals modifies the composition of gut microbiome. Three chemicals that are widely used in personal care products-diethyl phthalate (DEP), methylparaben (MPB), triclosan (TCS)-and their mixture (MIX) were administered at doses comparable to human exposure to Sprague-Dawley rats from birth through adulthood. Fecal samples were collected at two time points: postnatal day (PND) 62 (adolescence) and PND 181 (adulthood). The gut microbiome was profiled by 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing, taxonomically assigned and assessed for diversity.
RESULTS:
Metagenomic profiling revealed that the low-dose chemical exposure resulted in significant changes in the overall bacterial composition, but in adolescent rats only. Specifically, the individual taxon relative abundance for Bacteroidetes (Prevotella) was increased while the relative abundance of Firmicutes (Bacilli) was reduced in all treated rats compared to controls. Increased abundance was observed for Elusimicrobia in DEP and MPB groups, Betaproteobacteria in MPB and MIX groups, and Deltaproteobacteria in TCS group. Surprisingly, these differences diminished by adulthood (PND 181) despite continuous exposure, suggesting that exposure to the environmental chemicals produced a more profound effect on the gut microbiome in adolescents. We also observed a small but consistent reduction in the bodyweight of exposed rats in adolescence, especially with DEP and MPB treatment (p < 0.05), which is consistent with our findings of a reduced Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio at PND 62 in exposed rats.
CONCLUSIONS:
This study provides initial evidence that postnatal exposure to commonly used environmental chemicals at doses comparable to human exposure is capable of modifying the gut microbiota in adolescent rats; whether these changes lead to downstream health effects requires further investigation.
Keywords
Microbiota; Paraben; Phthalate; Triclosan
Tags
IRIS
•
Dibutyl Phthalate (DBP)
Database Searches
Litsearch Jan 2016 - July 2016
Pubmed
Excluded: No Primary Data on Health Effects
Not chemical specific
•
Diethyl phthalate (DEP)
Database searches
Jan 2017 update
Considered new
PubMed
Web of Science
Jan 2020 update
PubMed
Web of Science
Primary source of health effects
Animal toxicology studies
Developmental
•
Phthalates – Targeted Search for Epidemiological Studies
Source – all searches
Pubmed
WOS
Excluded
Source - Jun 2016 Update (Private)
Pubmed
Source - Dec 2016 Update (Private)
Pubmed
WOS
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