Ethological methods to study the effects of maternal exposure to estrogenic endocrine disrupters

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Ethological methods to study the effects of maternal exposure to estrogenic endocrine disrupters : a study with methoxychlor. / Palanza, P; Morellini, F; Parmigiani, S; vom Saal, F S.

in: NEUROTOXICOL TERATOL, Jahrgang 24, Nr. 1, 12.02.2002, S. 55-69.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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@article{6bdb15edce2843788385b3b40d0f6be3,
title = "Ethological methods to study the effects of maternal exposure to estrogenic endocrine disrupters: a study with methoxychlor",
abstract = "There has been increasing interest, both at the scientific and regulatory level, in the use of ethological methods for evaluating neural effects of endocrine disrupters. We present a series of ethological studies on the effects of maternal exposure to low, environmentally relevant doses (0.02, 0.2, and 2 microg/g mother bw/day) of the estrogenic pesticide methoxychlor (MXC) on behavior. From gestation day 11 to 17, female mice spontaneously drank oil with or without MXC; their maternal behavior was examined from postpartum days 2 to 15. MXC treatment during pregnancy produced slight changes in the expression of maternal behavior: females fed the lower MXC dose spent less time nursing the pups as compared to control dams. Their maternally exposed offspring were subjected to a series of behavioral tests at different ages. Maternal exposure to MXC affected behavioral responses to novelty in both sexes at periadolescence. The onset of male intrasex aggression was delayed in males prenatally exposed to low doses of MXC, since exposed males showed low levels of aggressive interactions during early adolescence but not after they reached adulthood. When adults, MXC-exposed females, but not males showed increased exploration in an unfamiliar open-field. While a sex difference was observed in the control group, with males being significantly more active in the open field than females, prenatal treatment with some MXC doses tended to decrease the sexual dimorphism in activity levels in the novel environment. Ethology, as the evolutionary study of behavior, may provide a framework for integrating a functional perspective (i.e., evolutionary significance) to studies on proximate mechanisms that can account for behavioral alterations induced by developmental exposure to endocrine disrupters.",
keywords = "Animals, Behavior, Animal, Endocrine System, Ethology, Female, Insecticides, Male, Methoxychlor, Mice, Pregnancy, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects, Sex Factors",
author = "P Palanza and F Morellini and S Parmigiani and {vom Saal}, {F S}",
year = "2002",
month = feb,
day = "12",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "55--69",
journal = "NEUROTOXICOL TERATOL",
issn = "0892-0362",
publisher = "Elsevier Inc.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ethological methods to study the effects of maternal exposure to estrogenic endocrine disrupters

T2 - a study with methoxychlor

AU - Palanza, P

AU - Morellini, F

AU - Parmigiani, S

AU - vom Saal, F S

PY - 2002/2/12

Y1 - 2002/2/12

N2 - There has been increasing interest, both at the scientific and regulatory level, in the use of ethological methods for evaluating neural effects of endocrine disrupters. We present a series of ethological studies on the effects of maternal exposure to low, environmentally relevant doses (0.02, 0.2, and 2 microg/g mother bw/day) of the estrogenic pesticide methoxychlor (MXC) on behavior. From gestation day 11 to 17, female mice spontaneously drank oil with or without MXC; their maternal behavior was examined from postpartum days 2 to 15. MXC treatment during pregnancy produced slight changes in the expression of maternal behavior: females fed the lower MXC dose spent less time nursing the pups as compared to control dams. Their maternally exposed offspring were subjected to a series of behavioral tests at different ages. Maternal exposure to MXC affected behavioral responses to novelty in both sexes at periadolescence. The onset of male intrasex aggression was delayed in males prenatally exposed to low doses of MXC, since exposed males showed low levels of aggressive interactions during early adolescence but not after they reached adulthood. When adults, MXC-exposed females, but not males showed increased exploration in an unfamiliar open-field. While a sex difference was observed in the control group, with males being significantly more active in the open field than females, prenatal treatment with some MXC doses tended to decrease the sexual dimorphism in activity levels in the novel environment. Ethology, as the evolutionary study of behavior, may provide a framework for integrating a functional perspective (i.e., evolutionary significance) to studies on proximate mechanisms that can account for behavioral alterations induced by developmental exposure to endocrine disrupters.

AB - There has been increasing interest, both at the scientific and regulatory level, in the use of ethological methods for evaluating neural effects of endocrine disrupters. We present a series of ethological studies on the effects of maternal exposure to low, environmentally relevant doses (0.02, 0.2, and 2 microg/g mother bw/day) of the estrogenic pesticide methoxychlor (MXC) on behavior. From gestation day 11 to 17, female mice spontaneously drank oil with or without MXC; their maternal behavior was examined from postpartum days 2 to 15. MXC treatment during pregnancy produced slight changes in the expression of maternal behavior: females fed the lower MXC dose spent less time nursing the pups as compared to control dams. Their maternally exposed offspring were subjected to a series of behavioral tests at different ages. Maternal exposure to MXC affected behavioral responses to novelty in both sexes at periadolescence. The onset of male intrasex aggression was delayed in males prenatally exposed to low doses of MXC, since exposed males showed low levels of aggressive interactions during early adolescence but not after they reached adulthood. When adults, MXC-exposed females, but not males showed increased exploration in an unfamiliar open-field. While a sex difference was observed in the control group, with males being significantly more active in the open field than females, prenatal treatment with some MXC doses tended to decrease the sexual dimorphism in activity levels in the novel environment. Ethology, as the evolutionary study of behavior, may provide a framework for integrating a functional perspective (i.e., evolutionary significance) to studies on proximate mechanisms that can account for behavioral alterations induced by developmental exposure to endocrine disrupters.

KW - Animals

KW - Behavior, Animal

KW - Endocrine System

KW - Ethology

KW - Female

KW - Insecticides

KW - Male

KW - Methoxychlor

KW - Mice

KW - Pregnancy

KW - Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects

KW - Sex Factors

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 11836072

VL - 24

SP - 55

EP - 69

JO - NEUROTOXICOL TERATOL

JF - NEUROTOXICOL TERATOL

SN - 0892-0362

IS - 1

ER -