Journal of Applied Toxicology | 2021

Behavioural effects of early‐life exposure to parabens in zebrafish larvae

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Parabens are classified as endocrine disrupting chemicals due to their ability to activate several nuclear receptors causing changes in hormones‐dependent signalling pathways. Central nervous system of developing organisms is particularly vulnerable to changes in hormonal pathways, which could lead to altered brain function, abnormal behaviour and even diseases later in life. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of exposure to butylparaben (BuP), ethylparaben (EtP) and methylparaben (MeP) during early development on nervous system using zebrafish larvae s behavioural models. Zebrafish were exposed until 4 days post fertilization (dpf) to three concentrations of each paraben chosen considering the environmentally realistic concentrations of human exposure and the benchmark‐dose lower bound calculated for zebrafish larvae (BuP: 5, 50 and 500\u2009μg/L; EtP: 50, 500 and 5000\u2009μg/L; MeP: 100, 1000 and 10,000\u2009μg/L). Activity in novel and in familiar environment, thigmotaxis, visual startle response and photic synchronization of the behavioural circadian rhythms were analysed at 4, 5 and 6 dpf. Zebrafish larvae exposed to BuP 500\u2009μg/L and EtP 5000\u2009μg/L revealed increased anxiety‐like behaviour in novel environment. Larvae treated with 500\u2009μg/L of BuP showed reduced activity in familiar and marginally in unfamiliar environment, and larvae exposed to 5000\u2009μg/L of EtP exhibited hyperactivity in familiar environment. Parabens exposure did not influence the visual startle response and the photic synchronization of circadian rhythms in zebrafish larvae. This research highlighted as the exposure to parabens has the potential to interfere with behavioural development of zebrafish.

Volume 41
Pages 1852 - 1862
DOI 10.1002/jat.4171
Language English
Journal Journal of Applied Toxicology

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