1. Polystyrene nanoplastics exposure causes erectile dysfunction in rats.
- Author
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Wang, Ming, Dai, Bangshun, Liu, Qiushi, Wang, Xiaobin, Xiao, Yunzheng, Zhang, Guilong, Jiang, Hui, Zhang, Xiansheng, and Zhang, Li
- Subjects
IMPOTENCE ,LABORATORY rats ,POLLUTANTS ,POLYSTYRENE ,RATS ,TESTOSTERONE ,BIODEGRADABLE plastics - Abstract
Polystyrene nanoplastics (PS-NPs), emerging and increasingly pervasive environmental contaminants, have the potential to cause persistent harm to organisms. Although previous reports have documented local accumulation and adverse effects in a variety of major organs after PS-NPs exposure, the impact of PS-NPs exposure on erectile function remains unexplored. Herein, we established a rat model of oral exposure to 100 nm PS-NPs for 28 days. To determine the best dose range of PS-NPs, we designed both low-dose and high-dose PS-NPs groups, which correspond to the minimum and maximum human intake doses, respectively. The findings indicated that PS-NPs could accumulate within the corpus cavernosum and high dose but not low dose of PS-NPs triggered erectile dysfunction. Moreover, the toxicological effects of PS-NPs on erectile function include fibrosis in the corpus cavernous, endothelial dysfunction, reduction in testosterone levels, elevated oxidative stress and apoptosis. Overall, this study revealed that PS-NPs exposure can cause erectile dysfunction via multiple ways, which provided new insights into the toxicity of PS-NPs. • Polystyrene nanoplastics (PS-NPs) can locally accumulate in corpus cavernosum. • PS-NPs exposure leads to erectile dysfunction via distinct mechanisms. • PS-NPs exposure causes fibrosis and impairs endothelial function in corpus cavernous. • PS-NPs exposure causes elevated oxidative stress and apoptosis in corpus cavernous. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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