BPA Exposure Linked to Gut Microbiota, Childhood Obesity in New Study

A synthetic chemical called Bisphenol A, or BPA, is widely used in the production of durable plastic products including eyewear, water bottles and epoxy resins. But it’s also an endocrine disruptor, which means that it can interfere with normal hormone functions in the body. Studies suggest that high levels of exposure may be detrimental to human health in a variety of ways; it may also alter the gut microbiome.

But the connections aren’t clear. Researchers in Spain recently studied a group of over 100 children to identify microbes that play a role in BPA exposure and degradation, with the larger goal of understanding the complicated relationship between that process and childhood obesity.

In their study, published this week in mSystems, the researchers found more unique bacteria taxa in children of normal weight than in overweight or obese children.

The findings suggest that BPA exposure could promote different microbial communities in normal weight children than those in children with obesity or who are overweight.

Previous studies have investigated symptoms and effects associated with BPA exposure.

Others have used mouse models and 16S rRNA gene sequencing, which can reveal microbes in complex mixtures of materials, like those from the gut or water.

The results came from a study of 106 children in Spain, roughly half boys and half girls, all between the ages of 5 and 10. They had participated in the OBEMIRISK project, an effort to understand the interplay between BPA and the gut microbiome sponsored by the European Food Safety Authority.

Sixty of the children were normal weight; the rest were either overweight or obese. Fecal samples from the children were exposed to several levels of BPA and allowed to incubate for 3 days.

Then, the researchers used 16s rRNA sequencing and amplicon sequencing, ultimately identifying 333 BPA-resistant bacterial species.

Notably, species of Clostridium and Romboutsia found in the BPA-cultured samples promoted the richness of microbiota communities.

Generally, Aguilera’s team noted, normal-weight children hosted a more diverse, enriched and structured network of bacteria than those found in the groups of overweight and obese children.

Those results, she said, suggest that the gut microbiota in normal-weight children may be more resilient when exposed to xenobiotic substances like BPA.

Knowing which microbes participate in the complex network connecting BPA, obesity and the gut microbiome, Aguilera said, could point to future interventions and policy changes that may reduce the risk of childhood obesity worldwide.

In future work, she said the researchers plan to similarly investigate how exposure to other synthetic chemicals, including parabens and phthalates, may influence the composition of the gut microbiome.


Sources:

Ana Lopez-Moreno, Klara Cerk, Lourdes Rodrigo, Antonio Suarez, Margarita Aguilera, Alicia Ruiz-Rodriguez. Bisphenol A exposure affects specific gut taxa and drives microbiota dynamics in childhood obesity. mSystems, 2024; DOI: 10.1128/msystems.00957-23

American Society for Microbiology. (2024, March 1). BPA exposure linked to gut microbiota, childhood obesity in new study. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 4, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/03/240301134625.htm

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