Endocrinology 2015-01-01

Neonatal estrogen exposure results in biphasic age-dependent effects on the skeletal development of male mice.

Kara J Connelly, Emily A Larson, Daniel L Marks, Robert F Klein

Index: Endocrinology 156(1) , 193-202, (2015)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Peak bone mass, one of the most important predictors for fracture risk later in life, is attained during puberty and adolescence and influenced by neonatal and pubertal sex-specific gonadal hormones and GH-IGF-I secretion patterns. This study examined the effects of brief neonatal estrogen (NE) exposure on growth and skeletal development in C57BL/6J mice. A single injection of 100-μg estradiol or vehicle was administered on the first day of life. Growth parameters were monitored and skeletal phenotyping performed at 16 weeks in female mice and at 4 and 16 weeks in male mice. NE exposure negatively impacted adult femoral length in both sexes, but adult body weight, areal bone density, and bone strength in female mice were unaffected. In contrast, somatic growth was attenuated in estrogen-exposed male mice throughout the study period. At the prepubertal time point, the estrogen-exposed males exhibited higher bone mineral density, cortical volume, and cortical thickness compared with controls. However, by the time of peak bone mass acquisition, the early skeletal findings had reversed; estrogen-exposed mice had lower bone density with reduced cross-sectional area, cortical volume, and cortical thickness, resulting in cortical bones that were less resistant to fracture. NE exposure also resulted in reduced testicular volume and lower circulating IGF-I. Male mice exposed to estrogen on the first day of life experience age-dependent changes in skeletal development. Prepubertal animals experience greater endocortical bone acquisition as a result of estrogen exposure. However, by adulthood, continued developmental changes result in overall reduced skeletal integrity.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Inducible, tightly regulated and growth condition-independent transcription factor in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

2014-01-01

[Nucleic Acids Res. 42(17) , e130, (2014)]

A precisely substituted benzopyran targets androgen refractory prostate cancer cells through selective modulation of estrogen receptors.

2015-03-15

[Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 283(3) , 187-97, (2015)]

Alpha-fetoprotein, identified as a novel marker for the antioxidant effect of placental extract, exhibits synergistic antioxidant activity in the presence of estradiol.

2014-01-01

[PLoS ONE 9(6) , e99421, (2014)]

Selective inhibition of RET mediated cell proliferation in vitro by the kinase inhibitor SPP86.

2014-01-01

[BMC Cancer 14 , 853, (2014)]

Loss of TGFβ Receptor Type 2 Expression Impairs Estrogen Response and Confers Tamoxifen Resistance.

2015-04-01

[Cancer Res. 75(7) , 1457-69, (2015)]

More Articles...