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ELEMENT RESEARCH

Recent Publications

Bou Ghanem, H., Kofas, M. M., Peterson, K. E., Cantoral, A., Aljahdali, A., Torres-Olascoaga, L., Tellez-Rojo, M. M., & Jansen, E. C. (2025). Sleep Duration Modifies the Association of the Alternate Mediterranean Diet Score With Metabolic Syndrome in Midlife Women in Mexico. The Journal of nutrition, S0022-3166(25)00524-3. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tjnut.2025.08.023

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Castiblanco-Rubio, G. A., Hector, E. C., Urena-Cirett, J., Cantoral, A., Hu, H., Peterson, K. E., Tellez-Rojo, M. M., & Martinez-Mier, E. A. (2025). Dietary Fluoride Exposure During Early Childhood and Its Association with Dental Fluorosis in a Sample of Mexican Adolescents. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 22(5), 689-. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22050689

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Zamora, A. N., Roberts, E. F. S., Téllez‑Rojo, M. M., Peterson, K. E., Torres‑Olascoaga, L. A., Cantoral, A., & Jansen, E. C. (2025). Social drivers of sleep experiences: Conversations with midlife working‑class women from Mexico City. Research Directions: Sleep Psychology, 2, Article e7. https://doi.org/10.1017/slp.2025.5

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Jansen, E. C., Lee, J. T., Dolinoy, D., Burgess, H. J., Chervin, R. D., Peterson, K. E., O’Brien, L. M., Téllez-Rojo, M. M., Cantoral, A., Torres-Olascoaga, L., Song, P. X. K., & Goodrich, J. M. (2025). Sleep timing and duration in relation to blood leukocyte DNA methylation in adolescents: an epigenome-wide analysis. Sleep (New York, N.Y.), 48(7), 1-. https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsaf050

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ELEMENT Project Cohort Profile

Abstract

Purpose: The Early Life Exposure in Mexico to ENvironmental Toxicants (ELEMENT) Project is a mother– child pregnancy and birth cohort originally initiated in the mid-1990s to explore: (1) whether enhanced mobilisation of lead from maternal bone stores during pregnancy poses a risk to fetal and subsequent offspring neurodevelopment; and (2) whether maternal calcium supplementation during pregnancy and lactation can suppress bone lead mobilization and mitigate the adverse effects of lead exposure on offspring health and development. Through utilization of carefully archived biospecimens to measure other prenatal exposures, banking of DNA and rigorous measurement of a diverse array of outcomes, ELEMENT has since evolved into a major resource for research on early life exposures and developmental outcomes. Participants n=1643 mother–child pairs sequentially recruited (between 1994 and 2003) during pregnancy or at delivery from maternity hospitals in Mexico City, Mexico. Findings to date: Maternal bone (e.g., patella, tibia) is an endogenous source for fetal lead exposure due to mobilization of stored lead into circulation during pregnancy and lactation, leading to increased risk of miscarriage, low birth weight and smaller head circumference, and transfer of lead into breastmilk. Daily supplementation with 1200 mg of elemental calcium during pregnancy and lactation reduces lead resorption from maternal bone and thereby, levels of circulating lead. Beyond perinatal outcomes, early life exposure to lead is associated with neurocognitive deficits, behavioral disorders, higher blood pressure and lower weight in offspring during childhood. Some of these relationships were modified by dietary factors; genetic polymorphisms specific for iron, folate and lipid metabolism; and timing of exposure. Research has also expanded to include findings published on other toxicants such as those associated with personal care products and plastics (e.g., phthalates, bisphenol A), other metals (e.g., mercury, manganese, cadmium), pesticides (organophosphates) and fluoride; other biomarkers (e.g., toxicant levels in plasma, hair and teeth); other outcomes (e.g., sexual maturation, metabolic syndrome, dental caries); and identification of novel mechanisms via epigenetic and metabolomics profiling. Future plans As the ELEMENT mothers and children age, we plan to (1) continue studying the long-term consequences of toxicant exposure during the perinatal period on adolescent and young adult outcomes as well as outcomes related to the original ELEMENT mothers, such as their metabolic and bone health during perimenopause; and (2) follow the third generation of participants (children of the children) to study intergenerational effects of in utero exposures.

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You can find the full Cohort Profile paper here.

ELEMENT Features

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ELEMENT PhD Candidate, Haneen Bou Ghanem, is featured in Earth.com article titled "Lack of sleep changes how your body responds to food"

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Reforma News covers ELEMENT water intermittency project​

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BBC article titled "The surprising foods that lead to better sleep" featuring ELEMENT co-investigator Erica Jansen

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Michigan Medicine Health Lab article titled "Chronic Short Sleep Associated with Adolescent Obesity" featuring ELEMENT research

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Dr. Mara Téllez Rojo talks about how to reduce lead exposure during International Lead Poisoning Prevention Week

ELEMENT launches sleep research website to disseminate research findings

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ELEMENT co-investigator, Christine Till​, quoted in C&EN article titled "A small city in Utah voted to keep fluoride in its water. Then the state banned it."

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NYT article titled "What to Eat and Drink for a Good Night's Sleep" featuring ELEMENT co-investigator Erica Jansen

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Michigan Public Health News Center article titled "Lead Exposure Linked to Lower Quality Sleep in Youth" featuring ELEMENT research

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ELEMENT co-investigator, Christine Till served as a research contributor on the Science VS podcast episode "Fluoride: Is Your Water Safe?" 

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List of available R packages created by ELEMENT biostatistics team 

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ELEMENT Work featured on Mexican Exposure Website

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The conversation article titled "What's the best diet for healthy sleep? A nutritional epidemiologist explains what food choices will help you get more restful z's" featuring ELEMENT co-investigator Erica Jansen

Dr. Mara Téllez Rojo and Dr. Liz Roberts talk about ELEMENT research at The Exposome: A New Way of Understanding Health Symposium

A list of our past ELEMENT features can be found here.

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