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Co-exposure to polystyrene nanoplastics and glyphosate exacerbates NETs-mediated pyroptosis by activating the NLRP3 inflammasome in mouse liver

Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 2025 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 58 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Huan Zeng, Jingyi Qi, Qian Chen, Rui Zhang, Guo Chen, Jinghua Zhao, Huimei Liang, Junlong Sun, Wei Wang, Houhui Song

Summary

Researchers found that co-exposing mice to polystyrene nanoplastics and the herbicide glyphosate caused significantly worse liver damage than either pollutant alone. The combined exposure triggered a chain of inflammatory events including immune cell infiltration, formation of neutrophil traps, and cell death in liver tissue, all driven by activation of a key inflammatory pathway called NLRP3. The study suggests that nanoplastics may amplify the harmful effects of common agricultural chemicals when they enter the body together.

Polymers
Body Systems
Models
Study Type In vivo

Nanoplastics (NPs), highly prevalent due to large-scale plastic production, and glyphosate (Gly), the most utilized herbicides worldwide, are ubiquitous environmental contaminants. Growing concerns highlight that NPs can act as vectors for various pollutants like Gly, but their combined toxic effects in mammals and the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. In this study, the hepatotoxicity and potential mechanisms under the exposure of polystyrene nanoplastics (PSNPs) and/or Gly in vivo and in vitro were investigated. Mice were treated with PSNPs (25 mg/kg/day) and/or Gly (50 mg/kg/day) by oral gavage for 5 weeks. Results showed that exposure to PSNPs or Gly caused liver injury in mice, with co-exposure resulting exacerbated hepatotoxicity, evidenced by increased neutrophil infiltration and ultrastructural damages, elevated oxidative stress (LPO, H2O2, T-AOC and CAT), increased neutrophil chemokines (CCL2, CXCL12) and marker of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) formation (MPO), and upregulated pyroptosis-related factors (TLR4, NF-κB, NLRP3, ASC, Caspase-1, GSDMD, IL-1β, IL-18). In addition, a co-culture system of peripheral blood neutrophils (PBNs) and AML12 cells was established, revealing that co-exposure amplified ROS production, NETs formation (SYTOX Green staining) and pyroptosis. Notably, inhibition of the NLRP3 inflammasome significantly reduced NETs production, and degradation of NETs substantially decreased pyroptosis, demonstrating feedback between NETs and the NLRP3 inflammasome that drives inflammation induced by PSNPs and Gly. These results highlight that co-exposure exacerbated NETs-mediated pyroptosis through NLRP3 inflammasome activation. Our study equips new reference for understanding the mechanistic insights and health implications of the combined toxicity of PSNPs and Gly.

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