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Kisspeptin-10

KP-10, Metastin (45-54), Kisspeptin-10 (human), KiSS-1

Quick Stats
Studies 877
Trials 47
Score 2
2022 pubmed 6 citations

Gestational bisphenol A exposure advances puberty onset in female offspring: Critical time window identification.

Wang. Gengfu G; Xu. Geng G; Zhang. Chao C; Han. Azhu A; Zhang. Guobao G; Chen. Liru L; Xie. Guodie G; Tao. Fangbiao F; Shen. Tong T; Su. Puyu P

Key Findings

  • Maternal BPA exposure during early (GD1‑GD6) or middle (GD7‑GD12) gestation speeds up puberty onset in female mouse offspring.
  • Offspring exposed to BPA in those windows have higher serum kisspeptin‑10 and GnRH levels at post‑natal day 34.
  • BPA exposure increases DNA methylation of the Eed gene promoter and lowers Eed mRNA in the hypothalamus, suggesting an epigenetic mechanism.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers focused on longevity and hormonal health, the takeaway is to minimize BPA exposure, especially during pregnancy, as it can disrupt puberty timing via kisspeptin pathways. Reducing BPA sources (e.g., avoiding certain plastics and canned foods) may help maintain normal endocrine function.

Summary

The study shows that when pregnant mice are exposed to the chemical bisphenol A (BPA) early or midway through pregnancy, their female babies hit puberty earlier. This early puberty is linked to higher levels of the hormone‑like peptide kisspeptin‑10 and changes in brain gene regulation.

Abstract

Increasing evidence shows that the early onset of puberty in female offspring may be caused by maternal prenatal exposure to bisphenol A (BPA) during pregnancy; however, the critical time window of maternal prenatal BPA exposure remains unknown. Here, we identify the critical time window of gestational BPA exposure that induces early onset of puberty in female offspring. Pregnant CD-1 mice were gavaged with BPA (8 mg/kg) daily during the early gestational stage (GD1-GD6), middle gestational stage (GD7-GD12) or late gestational stage (GD13-GD18). We show that maternal BPA exposure during the early and middle gestational stages could advance the vaginal opening time and increase the serum levels of kisspeptin-10 and GnRH in the female offspring at PND 34. Mechanistically, maternal BPA exposure during early and middle gestation could significantly increase CpG island methylation in the Eed gene promoters but reduce the mRNA expression of Eed in the hypothalamus tissues of the female offspring. In conclusion, the critical period of maternal BPA exposure-induced early onset of puberty in female offspring is early and middle gestation; this BPA-induced early onset of puberty might be partly attributed to epigenetic programming of the Eed gene in the hypothalamus. This study provides important insights regarding the relationship and the mechanisms between BPA and offspring pubertal development.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2022

Date

2022-12-09T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.ecoenv.2022.114387

Citations

6

References

36