Chronic Dietary Exposure to Methylparaben and Ethyl paraben Induces Developmental, Biochemical, and Behavioural Toxicity in Drosophila melanogaster

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Abstract

Parabens, particularly methylparaben (MP) and ethylparaben (EP), are extensively used preservatives in cosmetics, foods, and pharmaceuticals. Although considered safe at low concentrations, recent evidence questions their biological inertness under chronic exposure. This study evaluated the developmental, biochemical, and behavioral effects of continuous dietary MP and EP exposure in Drosophila melanogaster , an established in vivo model for toxicological screening. Flies were chronically exposed to MP (0.5–2%) or EP (0.5–1.5%) throughout development and adulthood. Developmental timing, lifespan, oxidative-stress markers (MDA, FRAP, total protein), and locomotor performance (negative geotaxis in adults, crawling in larvae) were quantified. Paraben exposure significantly delayed development (∼15% increase in eclosion time), reduced median lifespan (up to 50% decrease at 2% MP), and elevated oxidative damage (↑MDA, ↓FRAP) in a dose-dependent manner. Protein content declined more rapidly with age, suggesting oxidative degradation or proteolysis. Both adult climbing and larval crawling performances were impaired, linking biochemical stress to neuromuscular dysfunction. MP produced stronger oxidative and behavioral effects than EP. Feeding controls confirmed that observed deficits were not due to nutritional differences. Chronic MP and EP exposure induces systemic toxicity in D. melanogaster , integrating endocrine disruption and redox imbalance as plausible mechanisms. Given conserved stress and hormonal pathways, these findings reinforce the need to re-evaluate low-dose paraben safety limits and highlight Drosophila as a rapid, ethically viable platform for screening environmental preservatives and safer substitutes.

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