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Molecular insights underlying the adverse effects of bisphenol A on gonadal somatic cells' steroidogenic activity. | LitMetric

Molecular insights underlying the adverse effects of bisphenol A on gonadal somatic cells' steroidogenic activity.

Reprod Biol

Department of Biology and Pathology of Human Reproduction, Institute of Animal Reproduction and Food Research, Polish Academy of Sciences, Olsztyn, Poland; Department of Reproduction and Gynecological Endocrinology, Medical University of Bialystok, Poland. Electronic address:

Published: June 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • BPA exposure can impair hormone production in human granulosa and mouse Leydig cells, particularly at low concentrations affecting estradiol and testosterone levels.
  • At higher concentrations, BPA shows cytotoxic effects but does not affect cell proliferation.
  • The action of BPA involves complex mechanisms that alter the expression of steroidogenic genes and hormone receptors, with some effects countered by the estrogen receptor degrader fulvestrant.

Article Abstract

Bisphenol A (BPA) exposure may impair gonadal steroidogenesis, although the underlying mechanism is not well known. Hereby, we assessed BPA action on human primary granulosa (hGC) and mouse Leydig cells (BLTK-1) proliferation, cytotoxicity, hormone secretion, and steroidogenic enzyme/receptor gene profile. hGC and BLTK-1 cells were stimulated with increasing concentrations of BPA (10 M to 10 M for cell proliferation assay, 10 M to 10 M for LDH-cytotoxicity assay, and 10 M to 10 M for hormone secretion and genes expression analysis). BPA at low concentrations (pM - nM) did not affect cell proliferation in either cell type, although was toxic at higher (µM) concentrations. BPA stimulation at low nM concentrations decreased the production of estradiol (E) and testosterone (T) in BLTK-1, E and progesterone in hGCs. BPA down-regulated Star, Cyp11a1, and Hsd17b3, but up-regulated Cyp19a1, Esr1, Esr2, and Gpr30 expression in BLTK-1 cells. In hGC, BPA down-regulated STAR, CYP19A1, PGRMC1, and PAQR7 but up-regulated ESR2 expression. Estrogen receptor degrader fulvestrant (FULV) attenuated BPA inhibition of hormone production in both cell lines. FULV also blocked the BPA-induced Gpr30 up-regulation in BLTK-1 cells, whereas in hGC, failed to reverse the down-regulation of PGRMC1, STAR, and CYP19A1. Our findings provide novel mechanistic insights into environmentally-relevant doses of BPA action through both nuclear estrogen receptor-dependent and independent mechanisms affecting cultured granulosa and Leydig cell steroidogenesis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.repbio.2023.100766DOI Listing

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