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Polystyrene Nanoplastic Exposure Causes Reprogramming of Anti-Oxidative Genes Hmox1 and Sod3 by Inhibiting Nuclear Receptor RORγ in the Mouse Liver

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Pingyun Ding, Yu Wang Pingyun Ding, Madesh Muniyappan, Yu Wang Madesh Muniyappan, Peng Yuan, Chuyang Zhu, Chuyang Zhu, C. Li, Peng Yuan, C. Li, Saber Y. Adam, Yu Wang Yu Wang Yu Wang, Thobela Tyasi, Thobela Tyasi, Yu Wang Peng Yuan, Ping Hu, Haoyu Liu, Haoyu Liu, Demin Cai, Yu Wang

Summary

Researchers examined how polystyrene nanoplastics affect liver function in mice and found that exposure led to reduced body weight, increased oxidative stress markers, and liver enzyme changes. The study suggests that nanoplastics suppress antioxidant gene expression in the liver by inhibiting the nuclear receptor RORgamma and altering epigenetic modifications at key gene locations.

Polymers
Body Systems
Models

Plastic pollution is acknowledged as a serious problem for ecosystems. Among these plastics, polystyrene nanoplastics (PS-NPs) are emerging environmental pollutants, and their biological effects on hepatotoxicity are the least explored. Therefore, the present work examined the effect of PS-NPs on the hepatic transcription of the antioxidant genes <i>Hmox1</i> and <i>Sod3</i> in mice (<i>n</i> = 6, treatment (PS-NPs) vs. vehicle group (Veh)), mediated by RORγ and epigenetic modifications. The results show that PS-NP mice had significantly reduced body weight; increased activity of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), glutathione peroxidase (GSH), and Complexes I, III, and V in the liver; and increased Alanine Transaminase (ALT), Aspartate Transaminase (ASP), Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP), malondialdehyde (MDA) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) compared to the Veh group. Furthermore, PS-NPs resulted in considerably lower relative mRNA expression of Hmox1, Sod3, and RORγ in the liver than the Veh group. Likewise, when compared to Veh, PS-NPs significantly reduced the enrichment of RORγ, as well as the occupancies of the key components of the transcriptional activation pathway (P300, SRC1, Pol II, Ser5-Pol II, and Ser2-Pol II) at the loci of Hmox1 and Sod3. In comparison to Veh, PS-NPs showed downregulated occupancies of the histone active marks H3K9ac and H3K18ac, while H3K4me3 and H3K27me3 were higher at the target loci of Hmox1 and Sod3. In conclusion, the present study highlights that PS-NPs induce oxidative stress by modifying Hmox1 and Sod3 in mice's livers through histone changes and nuclear receptor RORγ modulation.

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