The modern world is plagued with expanding epidemics of diseases related to metabolic dysfunction. The factors that are driving
obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, and dyslipidemias (collectively termed metabolic syndrome) are usually
ascribed to a mismatch between the body’s homeostatic nutrient requirements and dietary excess, coupled with insufficient
exercise. The environmental obesogen hypothesis proposes that exposure to a toxic chemical burden is superimposed on these
conditions to initiate or exacerbate the development of obesity and its associated health consequences. Recent studies have
proposed a first set of candidate obesogens (diethylstilbestrol, bisphenol A, phthalates and organotins among others) that
target nuclear hormone receptor signaling pathways (sex steroid, RXR–PPARγ and GR) with relevance to adipocyte biology and
the developmental origins of health and disease (DOHaD). Perturbed nuclear receptor signaling can alter adipocyte proliferation,
differentiation or modulate systemic homeostatic controls, leading to long-term consequences that may be magnified if disruption
occurs during sensitive periods during fetal or early childhood development.
Keywords Environmental obesogen - Metabolic syndrome - Nuclear hormone receptors - RXR - PPARγ - Organotin - Obesogen