Early life exposure to low-dose perfluorooctane sulfonate disturbs gut barrier homeostasis and increases the risk of intestinal inflammation in offspring
By Y. Liu, G. Yu, R. Zhang, L. Feng, & J. Zhang
Environ Pollut
April 24, 2023
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2023.121708
Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS), one of the legacy per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), is associated with multiple adverse health effects on children. However, much remains to be known about its potential impacts on intestinal immune homeostasis during early life. Our study found that PFOS exposure during pregnancy in rats significantly increased the maternal serum levels of interleukin-6 (IL-6) and zonulin, a gut permeability biomarker, and decreased gene expressions of Tight junction protein 1 (Tjp1) and Claudin-4 (Cldn4), the tight junction proteins, in maternal colons on gestation day 20 (GD20). Being exposed to PFOS during pregnancy and lactation in rats significantly decreased the body weight of pups and increased the offspring's serum levels of IL-6 and tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) on postnatal day 14 (PND14), and induced a disrupted gut tight junction, manifested by decreased expressions of Tjp1 in pup's colons on PND14 and increased pup's serum concentrations of zonulin on PND28. By integrating high-throughput 16S rRNA sequencing and metabolomics, we demonstrated that early-life PFOS exposure altered the diversity and composition of gut microbiota that were correlated with the changed metabolites in serum. The altered blood metabolome was associated with increased proinflammatory cytokines in offspring. These changes and correlations were divergent at each developmental stage, and pathways underlying immune homeostasis imbalance were significantly enriched in the PFOS-exposed gut. Our findings provide new evidence for the developmental toxicity of PFOS and its underlying mechanism and explain in part the epidemiological observation of its immunotoxicity.
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