Oxybenzone Alters Mammary Gland Morphology in Mice Exposed During Pregnancy and Lactation.

TitleOxybenzone Alters Mammary Gland Morphology in Mice Exposed During Pregnancy and Lactation.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsLaPlante CD, Bansal R, Dunphy KA, D Jerry J, Vandenberg LN
JournalJ Endocr Soc
Volume2
Issue8
Pagination903-921
Date Published2018 Aug 01
ISSN2472-1972
Abstract

Hormones and endocrine-disrupting chemicals are generally thought to have permanent "organizational" effects when exposures occur during development but not adulthood. Yet, an increasing number of studies have shown that pregnant females are disrupted by endocrine-disrupting chemical exposures, with some effects that are permanent. Here, we examined the long-term effects of exposure to oxybenzone, an estrogenic chemical found in sunscreen and personal care products, on the morphology of the mammary gland in mice exposed during pregnancy and lactation. Female mice were exposed to vehicle or 30, 212, or 3000 µg oxybenzone/kg/d, from pregnancy day 0 until weaning. A nulliparous group, receiving vehicle treatment, was also evaluated. Mammary glands were collected 5 weeks after involution for whole-mount, histological, immunohistochemical, and molecular analyses. Exposure to 3000 µg oxybenzone/kg/d induced permanent changes to ductal density that was significantly different from both the nulliparous and vehicle groups. The two highest doses of oxybenzone similarly induced an intermediate phenotype for expression of progesterone receptor. A monotonic, dose-dependent increase in cell proliferation was also observed in the oxybenzone-treated females, becoming statistically significant at the highest dose. Finally, oxybenzone exposure induced an intermediate phenotype for Esr1 expression in all oxybenzone-treated groups. These data suggest that oxybenzone, at doses relevant to human exposures, produces long-lasting alterations to mammary gland morphology and function. Further studies are needed to determine if exposure to this chemical during pregnancy and lactation will interfere with the known protection that pregnancy provides against breast cancer.

DOI10.1210/js.2018-00024
Alternate JournalJ Endocr Soc
PubMed ID30057971
PubMed Central IDPMC6057512
Grant ListU01 ES026140 / ES / NIEHS NIH HHS / United States