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Featured researches published by Anneline Pinson.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Alteration of Rat Fetal Cerebral Cortex Development after Prenatal Exposure to Polychlorinated Biphenyls

Elise Naveau; Anneline Pinson; Arlette Gerard; Laurent Nguyen; Corinne Charlier; Jean-Pierre Thomé; R. Thomas Zoeller; Jean-Pierre Bourguignon; Anne-Simone Parent

Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are environmental contaminants that persist in environment and human tissues. Perinatal exposure to these endocrine disruptors causes cognitive deficits and learning disabilities in children. These effects may involve their ability to interfere with thyroid hormone (TH) action. We tested the hypothesis that developmental exposure to PCBs can concomitantly alter TH levels and TH-regulated events during cerebral cortex development: progenitor proliferation, cell cycle exit and neuron migration. Pregnant rats exposed to the commercial PCB mixture Aroclor 1254 ended gestation with reduced total and free serum thyroxine levels. Exposure to Aroclor 1254 increased cell cycle exit of the neuronal progenitors and delayed radial neuronal migration in the fetal cortex. Progenitor cell proliferation, cell death and differentiation rate were not altered by prenatal exposure to PCBs. Given that PCBs remain ubiquitous, though diminishing, contaminants in human systems, it is important that we further understand their deleterious effects in the brain.


Endocrine development | 2016

Current Changes in Pubertal Timing: Revised Vision in Relation with Environmental Factors Including Endocrine Disruptors.

Anne-Simone Parent; Delphine Franssen; Julie Fudvoye; Anneline Pinson; Jean-Pierre Bourguignon

The aim of this chapter is to revise some common views on changes in pubertal timing. This revision is based on recent epidemiological findings on the clinical indicators of pubertal timing and data on environmental factor effects and underlying mechanisms. A current advancement in timing of female puberty is usually emphasized. It appears, however, that timing is also changing in males. Moreover, the changes are towards earliness for initial pubertal stages and towards lateness for final stages in both sexes. Such observations indicate the complexity of environmental influences on pubertal timing. The mechanisms of changes in pubertal timing may involve both the central neuroendocrine control and peripheral effects at tissues targeted by gonadal steroids. While sufficient energy availability is a clue to the mechanism of pubertal development, changes in the control of both energy balance and reproduction may vary under the influence of common determinants such as endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs). These effects can take place right before puberty as well as much earlier, during fetal and neonatal life. Finally, environmental factors can interact with genetic factors in determining changes in pubertal timing. Therefore, the variance in pubertal timing is no longer to be considered under absolutely separate control by environmental and genetic determinants. Some recommendations are provided for evaluation of EDC impact in the management of pubertal disorders and for possible reduction of EDC exposure along the precautionary principle.


Journal of Andrology | 2016

Exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals and neurodevelopmental alterations.

Anneline Pinson; Jean-Pierre Bourguignon; Anne-Simone Parent

The developing brain is remarkably malleable as neural circuits are formed and these circuits are strongly dependent on hormones for their development. For those reasons, the brain is very vulnerable to the effects of endocrine‐disrupting chemicals (EDCs) during critical periods of development. This review focuses on three ubiquitous endocrine disruptors that are known to disrupt the thyroid function and are associated with neurobehavioral deficits: polychlorinated biphenyls, polybrominated diphenyl ethers, and bisphenol A. The human and rodent data suggesting effects of those EDCs on memory, cognition, and social behavior are discussed. Their mechanisms of action go beyond relative hypothyroidism with effects on neurotransmitter release and calcium signaling.


Hormone Research in Paediatrics | 2016

Contribution of the Endocrine Perspective in the Evaluation of Endocrine Disrupting Chemical Effects: The Case Study of Pubertal Timing.

Jean-Pierre Bourguignon; Anders Juul; Delphine Franssen; Julie Fudvoye; Anneline Pinson; Anne-Simone Parent

Debate makes science progress. In the field of endocrine disruption, endocrinology has brought up findings that substantiate a specific perspective on the definition of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), the role of the endocrine system and the endpoints of hormone and EDC actions among other issues. This paper aims at discussing the relevance of the endocrine perspective with regard to EDC effects on pubertal timing. Puberty involves particular sensitivity to environmental conditions. Reports about the advancing onset of puberty in several countries have led to the hypothesis that the increasing burden of EDCs could be an explanation. In fact, pubertal timing currently shows complex changes since advancement of some manifestations of puberty (e.g. breast development) and no change or delay of others (e.g. menarche, pubic hair development) can be observed. In a human setting with exposure to low doses of tenths or hundreds of chemicals since prenatal life, causation is most difficult to demonstrate and justifies a translational approach using animal models. Studies in rodents indicate an exquisite sensitivity of neuroendocrine endpoints to EDCs. Altogether, the data from both human and animal studies support the importance of concepts derived from endocrinology in the evaluation of EDC effects on puberty.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2016

Early exposure to Aroclor 1254 in vivo disrupts the functional synaptic development of newborn hippocampal granule cells

Anne-Simone Parent; Anneline Pinson; nick woods; Christina Chatzi; C. E. Vaaga; aesoon bensen; Arlette Gerard; Jean-Pierre Thomé; Jean-Pierre Bourguignon; Gary L. Westbrook

Neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus is sensitive to endogenous and exogenous factors that influence hippocampal function. Ongoing neurogenesis and the integration of these new neurons throughout life thus may provide a sensitive indicator of environmental stress. We examined the effects of Aroclor 1254 (A1254), a mixture of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), on the development and function of newly generated dentate granule cells. Early exposure to A1254 has been associated with learning impairment in children, suggesting potential impact on the development of hippocampus and/or cortical circuits. Oral A1254 (from the 6th day of gestation to postnatal day 21) produced the expected increase in PCB levels in brain at postnatal day 21, which persisted at lower levels into adulthood. A1254 did not affect the proliferation or survival of newborn neurons in immature animals nor did it cause overt changes in neuronal morphology. However, A1254 occluded the normal developmental increase in sEPSC frequency in the third post‐mitotic week without altering the average sEPSC amplitude. Our results suggest that early exposure to PCBs can disrupt excitatory synaptic function during a period of active synaptogenesis, and thus could contribute to the cognitive effects noted in children exposed to PCBs.


Comptes Rendus Biologies | 2017

Neuroendocrine disruption without direct endocrine mode of action: Polychloro-biphenyls (PCBs) and bisphenol A (BPA) as case studies

Anneline Pinson; Delphine Franssen; Arlette Gerard; Anne-Simone Parent; Jean-Pierre Bourguignon


Archive | 2015

Effects of prenatal and lactational exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls on hippocampal neurogenesis in pups and young adults

Anneline Pinson; Anne-Simone Parent; Christina Chatzi; nick woods; aesoon bensen; Arlette Gerard; Elise Naveau; Jean-Pierre Thomé; Jean-Pierre Bourguignon; Gary L. Westbrook


Archive | 2015

Effects of perinatal exposure to PCBs on thyroid hormones, spinogenesis and neurogenesis in mice dentate gyrus.

Anneline Pinson; Anne-Simone Parent; nick woods; Christina Chatzi; aesoon bensen; Arlette Gerard; Elise Naveau; Jean-Pierre Thomé; Jean-Pierre Bourguignon; Gary L. Westbrook


Revue médicale de Liège | 2014

[Endocrine disruption: a challenge in research, public health and clinical practice].

Julie Fudvoye; Delphine Franssen; Elise Naveau; Anneline Pinson; Arlette Gerard; Jean-Pierre Bourguignon; Anne-Simone Parent


Archive | 2014

Neuroendocrine Disruption: Effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals on the hippocampus, the cerebral cortex and the hypothalamus

Anne-Simone Parent; Anneline Pinson; Delphine Franssen; Elise Naveau; Christina Chatzi; Arlette Gerard; Jean-Pierre Bourguignon

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