0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Nanoplastics Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Exploring immune responses of microplastics exposure using high-dimensional spectral flow cytometry

Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) 2024 Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Annemijne Van Den Berg, Maartje Rietdijk, Esther S. Lenssen, Maartje Rietdijk, Esther S. Lenssen, Maartje Rietdijk, Esther S. Lenssen, Esther S. Lenssen, Annemijne Van Den Berg, Annemijne Van Den Berg, Esther S. Lenssen, Esther S. Lenssen, Esther S. Lenssen, Annemijne Van Den Berg, Maartje Rietdijk, Carmen Mihai, Esther S. Lenssen, Esther S. Lenssen, Esther S. Lenssen, Esther S. Lenssen, Esther S. Lenssen, Carmen Mihai, Carmen Mihai, Raymond Pieters Visileanu, Emilia, Visileanu, Emilia, Carmen Mihai, Annemijne Van Den Berg, Annemijne Van Den Berg, Annemijne Van Den Berg, Annemijne Van Den Berg, Raymond Pieters Raymond Pieters Raymond Pieters Gerard Hoek, Raymond Pieters Gerard Hoek, Raymond Pieters Raymond Pieters Gerard Hoek, Gerard Hoek, Juan Garcia Vallejo, Raymond Pieters Esther S. Lenssen, Esther S. Lenssen, Annemijne Van Den Berg, Annemijne Van Den Berg, Annemijne Van Den Berg, Annemijne Van Den Berg, Juan Garcia Vallejo, Juan Garcia Vallejo, Raymond Pieters Juan Garcia Vallejo, Raymond Pieters Raymond Pieters Raymond Pieters Maartje Rietdijk, Maartje Rietdijk, Raymond Pieters Raymond Pieters Raymond Pieters Esther S. Lenssen, Raymond Pieters Raymond Pieters Raymond Pieters Raymond Pieters Esther S. Lenssen, Gerard Hoek, Gerard Hoek, Gerard Hoek, Gerard Hoek, Gerard Hoek, Raymond Pieters Gerard Hoek, Raymond Pieters

Summary

Researchers used high-dimensional spectral flow cytometry to characterize immune responses to microplastic and nanoplastic exposure in human cells, examining changes in intracellular signaling following uptake of plastic particles. The multi-parameter approach revealed complex immune alterations in cells exposed to micro- and nanoplastics, highlighting potential immunotoxicity pathways.

Micro- and nanoplastics (MNPs) pollution is of growing political and public concern. Human exposure to MNPs resides predominantly from ingestion and inhalation and MNPs have been detected in various human tissues. Animal and an vitro studies show that MNPs can be taken up by cells, causing chances in intracellular signaling pathways and affecting immune homeostasis. Little is known however of how MNPs may affect the human immune system on a global level in real life exposure scenario's. We have developed two complementary immunomonitoring panels for spectral flow cytometry, consisting of 69 markers in total to assess lineage and functional status of the major cell subsets in human peripheral blood. These panels identify B cells, monocytes, dendritic cells, T cells, natural killer (NK) cells, innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) and unconventional T cells. To investigate the potential immune responses of acute and chronic MNP exposure in humans, samples from two different exposure studies were used. One included healthy volunteers who had payed 4-hour visits to three different outdoor locations where expected traffic-related MNPs concentrations were low, medium and high. Blood samples were taken at the start and end of the visit and the next day. For the second study blood samples were taken from healthy workers in a textile factory, where fibrous MNPs are likely to be present in the air due to processing of the textiles. Office personnel from the same factory working in sections where expected MNPs exposure was low, served as controls. From all blood samples peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were isolated, stained with the two panels and acquired on the Cytek 5 Laser Aurora spectral flow cytometer. A combination of manual and unsupervised analysis will be applied to explore how MNPs may alter immune cell composition and activation. Also see: https://micro2024.sciencesconf.org/559440/document

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper