Meeting Abstract
Environmental xenoestrogens such as Bisphenol-A (BPA), have been shown to depress and delay regeneration in a variety of planarian species at high doses, and to work in a non-monotonic fashion and stimulate regeneration at very low doses. Prior work in our lab has suggested that bisphenol compounds are interacting with an estrogen receptor (ER)-like pathway in planaria. In vertebrate systems, weak ER agonists like BPA are known to repress ER responses at high doses and increase ER responses at low doses in a manner very similar to the decrease and increase in growth we observe in regenerating planaria. Since regeneration involves both proliferation and cell movement, we hypothesized that cytoskeleton may be one of the mechanisms by which endocrine disruptors are affecting regeneration in flatworms. In this work we compare the effects both tubulin stabilizing and disrupting agents and examine the tubulin cytoskeleton in regenerating planaria exposed to BPA.