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Effects of BPA in snails: Oehlmann et al. respond.


We welcome critical appraisals that help to provide balance; however, Dietrich et al. gave an unjustified reproach. We feel that Dietrich's position is severely compromised because he serves as an expert for the bisphenol A (BPA BPA British Paediatric Association. ) Industry Group (Brussels, Belgium). We would like to respond to the issues raised by Dietrich et al., as well as to their oversights and inappropriate interpretations of our findings.

The source of test animals was clearly provided in our "Materials and Methods" (Oehlmann et al. 2005). All animals were dissected and sexed; thus, sex distribution was known for each time-point of the experiment. We supposed a 1:1 sex ratio for dead snails, although historical data (n > 14,000) indicate a slight prevalence of females (1.13:1); therefore, our assumption was conservative. Egg production was corrected for the number of females in the tanks, and snail densities were equal for all groups at each time-point.

Semistatic designs are widely applied in scientific and regulatory ecotoxicology The term ecotoxicology was coined by Truhaut in 1969, who defined it as "the branch of toxicology concerned with the study of toxic effects, caused by natural or synthetic pollutants, to the constituents of ecosystems, animal (including human), vegetable and microbial, in an  [Organization for Economic Development and Co-operation (OECD OECD: see Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. ) 1998]. The actual exposure concentrations of BPA were measured and clearly communicated in our Tables 1 and 2 (Oehlmann et al. 2005). Because 17[alpha]-ethinylestradiol (E[E.sub.2]) is more stable than BPA (Larsson et al. 1999), exposure to the positive control is also guaranteed in our 24-hr renewal test. Interestingly, Dietrich himself coauthored a semistatic study on snails (Czech et al. 2001) with several shortcomings: they used no analytical verification of exposure concentrations, no replicates, and inconsistent group size.

Analysis of covariance Covariance

A measure of the degree to which returns on two risky assets move in tandem. A positive covariance means that asset returns move together. A negative covariance means returns vary inversely.
 (ANCOVA ANCOVA Analysis of Covariance ) analyses of fecundity fecundity /fe·cun·di·ty/ (fe-kun´dit-e)
1. in demography, the physiological ability to reproduce, as opposed to fertility.

2. ability to produce offspring rapidly and in large numbers.
, development, and other cumulative data are widely used (Bochdansky and Bollens 2004; Dziminski and Alford 2005; Scharer and Wedekind 1999). In our experiment 2 with replicates (Oehlmann et al. 2005), ANOVA anova

see analysis of variance.

ANOVA Analysis of variance, see there
 confirmed the ANCOVA results (Figure 2A, 2C). A BPA Industry Group-sponsored statistical reevaluation of our raw data (Ecostat 2005) concluded that "at 20[degrees]C the mean egg production increased compared to the control in the BPA-exposed females at all applied concentrations (0.25, 0.5, 1 and 5 [micro]g/L), and decreased in the BPA+faslodex- or tamoxifen-exposed females."

We achieved an association for a steady state of specific binding in three independent time-course studies (Oehlmann et al. 2005). We determined nonspecific nonspecific /non·spe·cif·ic/ (non?spi-sif´ik)
1. not due to any single known cause.

2. not directed against a particular agent, but rather having a general effect.


nonspecific

1.
 binding using a 1,000-fold excess of unlabeled ligands resulting in clear specific binding for testosterone and estradiol. At higher concentrations, nonspecific binding was 70%, comparable with findings of Chou and Dietrich (1999), who also performed their experiments in duplicate. This percentage might be due to homogenization homogenization (həmŏj'ənəzā`shən), process in which a mixture is made uniform throughout. Generally this procedure involves reducing the size of the particles of one component of the mixture and dispersing them evenly  of large amounts of tissue with high protein content but a limited degree of specific cytosolic binding sites. In our study (Oehlmann et al. 2005), we did not intend to deliver a complete binding study in which saturation experiments with Scatchard analysis are needed, but to provide indications for the presence of estrogen receptors by a specific binding of ligands to cytosolic extracts (a widely used practice). Tamoxifen tamoxifen (təmŏk`sĭfĕn'), synthetic hormone used in the treatment of breast cancer. Introduced in 1978, tamoxifen is used to prevent recurrences of cancer in women who have already undergone surgery to remove their tumors.  was not disqualified as an antiestrogen because it elicited a binding higher than that of BPA. Furthermore, in vitro ligand affinities have a limited predictive value for biologic potencies in vivo (Kloas et al. 1999). In summary, the binding study was performed appropriately for the desired purpose and provides initial evidence for specific estrogen binding sites with high affinity for BPA.

Data presented in our Figure 1B (Oehlmann et al. 2005) were published in Schulte-Oehlmann et al. (2001) without E[E.sub.2] because the focus of that work was comparing responses to BPA in four prosobranch species, including Marisa. Because the article was published in German, the distribution was not large enough to bring the issue to a wider audience. In the current article (Oehlmann et al. 2005), E[E.sub.2] data were included to demonstrate the masking of BPA effects during the spawning season. Because future BPA industry-sponsored studies intend to investigate BPA effects under conditions maximizing reproduction, the problem of masked effects and an associated loss of sensitivity is of vital importance.

Responses in Marisa (ruptured oviducts, increased spawning) are estrogen specific and opposite of androgenic effects (imposex, reduced spawning). This and evidence communicated in our article (Oehlmann et al. 2005) justify the use of E[E.sub.2] to demonstrate the responsiveness of organisms. Nonmonotonic concentration responses have also been reported for estrogen-regulated end points in E[E.sub.2]-exposed fish (Pawlowski et al. 2004), supporting our view that estrogen-specific binding sites in Marisa may represent functional receptors.

Dietrich et al.'s charges that our "Introduction" and "Discussion" were "imbalanced and indeed alarmist" and that we selectively used literature are unjustified.

We hope that the evidence presented here serves to refute the unjustified claims made by Dietrich et al. We leave it to the readers to make final judgment, but we feel that with the ever-increasing body of evidence showing effects of BPA on reproduction in various animal species, common sense will eventually prevail on this issue.

The authors declare they have no competing financial interests.

Jorg Oehlmann

Ulrike Schulte-Oehlmann

Matthias Oetken

Johann Wolfgang Goethe University

Frankfurt am Main

Institute of Ecology, Evolution and Diversity

Frankfurt am Main, Germany

E-mail: oehlmann@zoology.uni-frankfurt.de

Jean Bachmann

Federal Environmental Agency

Section Ecological Assessment of Substances

Dessau, Germany

Ilka il·ka   also ilk
adj. Scots
Each; every.



[Middle English ilk a, each one : ilk (variant of ech, each; see each) + a, one, a
 Lutz

Werner Kloas

Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries

Department of Inland Fisheries

Berlin, Germany

Thomas A. Ternes

Federal Institute of Hydrology

Koblenz, Germany

REFERENCES

Bochdansky AB, Bollens SM. 2004. Relevant scales in zooplankton zooplankton: see marine biology.
zooplankton

Small floating or weakly swimming animals that drift with water currents and, with phytoplankton, make up the planktonic food supply on which almost all oceanic organisms ultimately depend (see
 ecology: distribution, feeding, and reproduction of the copepod copepod: see crustacean.
copepod

Any of the 10,000 known species of crustaceans in the subclass Copepoda. Copepods are widely distributed and ecologically important, serving as food for many species of fish.
 Acartia hudsonica in response to thin layers of the diatom diatom (dī`ətŏm', -tōm'), unicellular organism of the kingdom Protista, characterized by a silica shell of often intricate and beautiful sculpturing. Most diatoms exist singly, although some join to form colonies.  Skeletonema costatum. Limnol Oceanogr 49:625-636.

Chou YJ, Dietrich DR. 1999. Interactions of nitromusk parent compounds and their amino-metabolites with the estrogen receptors of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and the South African clawed frog (Xenopus laevis). Toxicol Lett 111:27-36.

Czech P, Weber K, Dietrich DR. 2001. Effects of endocrine modulating substances on reproduction in the hermaphroditic her·maph·ro·dite  
n.
1. An animal or plant exhibiting hermaphroditism.

2. Something that is a combination of disparate or contradictory elements.
 snail Lymnaea stagnalis L. Aquat Toxicol 53:103-114.

Dziminski MA, Alford RA. 2005. Patterns and fitness consequences of intraclutch variation in egg provisioning in tropical Australian frogs. Oecologia 146:98-109.

Ecostat. 2005. Experiments on the Effect of BPA on the Snail Species Marisa cornuarietis as Described in Three Papers by Oehlmann: Evaluation of the Applied Statistics and Analysis of the Raw Data. Report 05/011. Leiden:Ecostat--Statistical Consultancy in Ecology, Ecotoxicology and Agricultural Research.

Kloas W, Lutz I, Einspanier R. 1999. Amphibians amphibians

members of the animal class Amphibia. Includes frogs, toads, newts, salamanders and cecilians all capable of living on land or in water.
 as a model to study endocrine disruptors: II. Estrogenic activity of environmental chemicals in vitro and in vivo. Sci Total Environ 225:59-68.

Larsson DGJ, Adolfsson-Erici M, Parkkonen J, Pettersson M, Berg AH, Olsson PE, et al. 1999. Ethinyloestradiol--an undesired fish contraceptive? Aquatic Toxicol 45:91-97.

OECD. 1998. Guideline for Testing of Chemicals. Daphnia magna Reproduction Test. TG 211. Paris: Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development.

Oehlmann J, Schulte-Oehlmann U, Bachmann J, Oetken M, Lutz I, Kloas W, et al. 2006. Bisphenol A induces superfeminization in the ramshorn snail Marisa cornuarietis (Gastropoda: Prosobranchia) at environmentally relevant concentrations. Environ Health Perspect 114(suppl 1):127-133.

Pawlowski S, van Aerle R, Tyler CR, Braunbeck T. 2004. Effects of 17[alpha]-ethinylestradiol in a fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas) gonadal gonadal

pertaining to or arising from a gonad. See also testicular, ovarian.


gonadal cords
cords formed by epithelial cells which migrate from the mesonephric tubules in the embryo to the gonadal ridge and establish the indifferent
 recrudescence recrudescence /re·cru·des·cence/ (re?kroo-des´ens) recurrence of symptoms after temporary abatement.recrudes´cent

re·cru·des·cence
n.
 assay. Ecotoxicol Environ Saf 57:330-345.

Scharer L, Wedekind C. 1999. Lifetime reproductive output in a hermaphrodite hermaphrodite (hərmăf`rədīt'), animal or plant that normally possesses both male and female reproductive systems, producing both eggs and sperm.  cestode cestode: see Platyhelminthes; tapeworm.  when reproducing alone or in pairs: a time cost of pairing. Evol Ecol 13:381-394.

Schulte-Oehlmann U, Tillmann M, Casey D, Duft M, Markert B, Oehlmann J. 2001. Ostrogenartige Wirkungen von Bisphenol A auf Vorderkiemerschnecken (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Prosobranchia). UWSF UWSF United Warrior Survivor Foundation
UWSF Ultra-Wideband Scattering Field
 Z Umweltchem Okotoxikol 13:319-333.
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Title Annotation:Correspondence
Author:Ternes, Thomas A.
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Jun 1, 2006
Words:1252
Previous Article:Effects of BPA in snails.(Correspondence)
Next Article:Erratum.(Correction notice)



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