1. Effect-Based Analysis of Endocrine Disrupting Chemical Mixtures in Breast Milk and Possible Health Consequences for Human Infants.
- Author
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Collet, Bérénice Constance and Collet, Bérénice Constance
- Abstract
The research described in this thesis investigated the amount and potential effects of EDCs present in human milk using samples derived from the Norwegian HUMIS cohort. This work focused on three main actors of the endocrine system, the estrogens, androgens, and thyroid hormones. The first aim of the thesis was to develop a suitable method to properly extract EDCs from human milk samples, focusing on both polar and apolar endocrine active contaminants. The second aim was to perform a pilot study on a limited number of breast milk samples, using the existing ERα and AR CALUX bioassays, in agonistic and antagonistic mode. This phase was also used to evaluate the nature and origin of the observed EDC activity, as well as the contribution of endogenous hormones to the measurements. The third goal was to measure the EDC activity in a larger set of human milk samples to evaluate the potential association between anti-androgenic EDCs and an androgen-dependent deformity: cryptorchidism. The last objective was the development and application of novel thyroid hormone-based bioassays, TRβ CALUX and TTR-TRβ CALUX assays. These bioassays were used to evaluate the impact of breast milk contaminants, including well-known PFAS (perfluorooctanoic acid or PFOA; perfluorooctane sulfonic acid or PFOS), on the thyroid system. The thesis is divided in two distinct parts: Chapter Two and Chapter Three focusing on sex steroid disruption, and Chapter Four and Chapter Five covering thyroid system interferences, respectively. In Chapter Two, the method developed to extract EDCs from breast milk samples, used throughout the thesis, is described. In this chapter, estrogenic, anti-estrogenic, androgenic, and anti-androgenic activities derived from ten human milk extracts were analyzed on the (anti-)ERα and (anti-)AR CALUX bioassays. To rule out the impact of endogenous hormones in the measured activity, a pooled breast milk sample presenting anti-androgenic activity was fractionated and screened
- Published
- 2021