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The pollutome-connectome axis: a putative mechanism to explain pollution effects on neurodegeneration

Journal of Young Pharmacists 2023 23 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Lorenzo Pini, Alessandro Salvalaggio, Alexandra Wennberg, Anastasia Dimakou, Michela Matteoli, Maurizio Corbetta

Summary

This review proposes the 'pollutome-connectome axis' as a mechanistic framework explaining how environmental pollutants, including air pollution and PFAS chemicals, alter brain network connectivity and may drive cognitive impairment and neurodegeneration, with implications for urbanizing populations worldwide.

Body Systems
Models

The study of pollutant effects is extremely important to address the epochal challenges we are facing, where world populations are increasingly moving from rural to urban centers, revolutionizing our world into an urban world. These transformations will exacerbate pollution, thus highlighting the necessity to unravel its effect on human health. Epidemiological studies have reported that pollution increases the risk of neurological diseases, with growing evidence on the risk of neurodegenerative disorders. Air pollution and water pollutants are the main chemicals driving this risk. These chemicals can promote inflammation, acting in synergy with genotype vulnerability. However, the biological underpinnings of this association are unknown. In this review, we focus on the link between pollution and brain network connectivity at the macro-scale level. We provide an updated overview of epidemiological findings and studies investigating brain network changes associated with pollution exposure, and discuss the mechanistic insights of pollution-induced brain changes through neural networks. We explain, in detail, the pollutome-connectome axis that might provide the functional substrate for pollution-induced processes leading to cognitive impairment and neurodegeneration. We describe this model within the framework of two pollutants, air pollution, a widely recognized threat, and polyfluoroalkyl substances, a large class of synthetic chemicals which are currently emerging as new neurotoxic source.

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