Journal article
Epigenetic regulation of neurodevelopmental genes in response to in utero exposure to phthalate plastic chemicals: How can we delineate causal effects?
AL Ponsonby, C Symeonides, P Vuillermin, J Mueller, PD Sly, R Saffery
Neurotoxicology | ELSEVIER | Published : 2016
Abstract
Accumulating evidence, from animal models and human observational studies, implicates the in utero (and early postnatal) environment in the 'programming' of risk for a variety of adverse outcomes and health trajectories. The modern environment is replete with man-made compounds such as plastic product chemicals (PPC), including phenols and phthalates. Evidence from several human cohorts implicates exposure to these chemicals in adverse offspring neurodevelopment, though a direct causal relationship has not been firmly established. In this review we consider a potential causal pathway that encompasses epigenetic human variation, and how we might test this mechanistic hypothesis in human studi..
View full abstractGrants
Funding Acknowledgements
We thank Rianna Chapman and Helen Raschella for literature review and manuscript preparation. Anne-Louise Ponsonby, Peter Sly and Richard Saffery are supported by NHMRC fellowships. Christos Symeonides is supported by a NHMRC PhD scholarship. Research at Murdoch Childrens Research Institute is supported by the Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Support Program.