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Aged fragmented-polypropylene microplastics induced ageing statues-dependent bioenergetic imbalance and reductive stress: In vivo and liver organoids-based in vitro study.

Authors :
Cheng, Wei
Chen, Hange
Zhou, Yue
You, Yifei
Lei, Dong
Li, Yan
Feng, Yan
Wang, Yan
Source :
Environment International. Sep2024, Vol. 191, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

[Display omitted] • PP-MP particles made from plastic cup lids by UV-ageing to mimic the realistic oral intake way. • The relationship between carbonyl index (CI) of aged PP and hepatotoxicity was firstly explored. • Low-dose of aPP induced reductive stress in liver organoids with disrupted mitochondrial respiratory chain function. • aPP-elevated NADH/NAD+ratio in the liver and declined bioenergy supply in CI-dependent manner. • aPP-altered the serum profile of indicators hinting reductive stress in CI-dependent manner. Ageing is a nature process of microplastics that occurrs daily, and human beings are inevitably exposed to aged microplastics. However, a systematic understanding of ageing status and its toxic effect is currently still lacking. In this study, plastic cup lids-originated polypropylene (PP) microplastics were UV-photoaged until the carbonyl index (CI), a canonical indicator for plastic ageing, achieved 0.08, 0.17, 0.22 and 0.28. The adverse hepatic effect of these aged PPs (aPPs) was evaluated in Balb/c mice (75 ng/mL water, about 200 particles/day) and human-originated liver organoids (LOs, 50 particles/mL, ranged from 5.94 to 13.15 ng/mL) at low-dose equivalent to human exposure level. Low-dose of aged PP could induce hepatic reductive stress both in vitro and in vivo , by elevating the NADH/NAD+ratio in a CI-dependent manner, together with hepatoxicity (indicated by increased AST secretion and cytotoxicity), and disrupted the genes encoding the nutrients transporters and NADH subunits accompanied by the restricted ATP supply, declined mitochondrial membrane potential and mitochondrial complexI/IV activities, without significant increase in MDA levels in the liver. These changes in the liver disrupted systematic metabolism, representing a circulatory panel of increases in the lactate, triglyceride, Fgf21 levels, and decreases in the pyruvate level, linked the reductive stress to the declined body weight gain but elevated hepatic NADH contents following aPPs exposure. Additionally, assessing by the LOs, it was found that digestion drastically accelerated the ageing of aPPs and worsen the energy supply upon mitochondria, representing a "scattergun effect" induced by the formation of micro- and nano-plastics mixture toward NADH/NAD+imbalance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01604120
Volume :
191
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Environment International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179709105
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2024.108949