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ARTÍCULO

In Utero exposure to mercury is associated with increased susceptibility to liver injury and inflammation in childhood

Autores: Stratakis, N. (Autor de correspondencia); Golden-Mason, L.; Margetaki, K.; Zhao, Y. Q.; Valvi, D.; García, E.; Maitre, L.; Andrusaityte, S.; Basagana, X.; Borras, E.; Bustamante, M.; Casas, M.; Fossati, S.; Grazuleviciene, R.; Haug, L. S.; Heude, B.; McEachan, R. R. C.; Meltzer, H. M.; Papadopoulou, E.; Roumeliotaki, T.; Robinson, O.; Sabido, E.; Urquiza, J.; Vafeiadi, M.; Varo Cenarruzabeitia, Nerea; Wright, J.; Vos, M. B.; Hu, H.; Vrijheid, M.; Berhane, K. T.; Conti, D. V.; McConnell, R.; Rosen, H. R.; Chatzi, L.
Título de la revista: HEPATOLOGY
ISSN: 0270-9139
Volumen: 74
Número: 3
Páginas: 1546 - 1559
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Resumen:
Background and Aims Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most prevalent cause of liver disease in children. Mercury (Hg), a ubiquitous toxic metal, has been proposed as an environmental factor contributing to toxicant-associated fatty liver disease. Approach and Results We investigated the effect of prenatal exposure to Hg on childhood liver injury by combining epidemiological results from a multicenter mother-child cohort with complementary in vitro experiments on monocyte cells that are known to play a key role in liver immune homeostasis and NAFLD. We used data from 872 mothers and their children (median age, 8.1 years; interquartile range [IQR], 6.5-8.7) from the European Human Early-Life Exposome cohort. We measured Hg concentration in maternal blood during pregnancy (median, 2.0 mu g/L; IQR, 1.1-3.6). We also assessed serum levels of alanine aminotransferase (ALT), a common screening tool for pediatric NAFLD, and plasma concentrations of inflammation-related cytokines in children. We found that prenatal Hg exposure was associated with a phenotype in children that was characterized by elevated ALT (>= 22.1 U/L for females and >= 25.8 U/L for males) and increased concentrations of circulating IL-1 beta, IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-alpha.
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