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Mechanism insights into the histopathological changes of polypropylene microplastics induced gut and liver in zebrafish

Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 2024 19 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Lei Chen, Lei Chen, Lei Chen, Linhao Zong, Ran Tian, Linhao Zong, Miao Guan, Miao Guan, Lei Chen, Lei Chen, Lei Chen, Lei Chen, Le He, Ya-Ming Wan, Ya-Ming Wan, Ya-Ming Wan, Ya-Ming Wan, Ya-Ming Wan, Ya-Ming Wan, Le He, Le He, Ziwen Zhao, Miao Guan, Ziwen Zhao, Miao Guan, Ting Gao, Linhao Zong, Linhao Zong, Jiang Chang, Junfeng Zhang, Junfeng Zhang

Summary

Researchers exposed zebrafish to polypropylene microplastics, one of the most common plastics found in rivers, and found damage to both the intestines and liver. The microplastics thinned the intestinal walls, disrupted gut bacteria communities, and altered liver gene activity related to fat processing and immune response. Since polypropylene is widely found in food packaging and the environment, these findings raise questions about similar effects in humans who ingest this type of microplastic.

Polymers
Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MPs), emerging as significant pollutants, have been consistently detected in aquatic environments, with the Yangtze River experiencing a particularly severe level of microplastic pollution, exceeding all other watersheds in China. Polypropylene (PP), the plastic most abundantly found in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River Basin, has less comprehensive research results into its toxic effects. Consequently, the present investigation employed zebrafish as a model organism to delve into the toxicological impacts of polypropylene microplastics (PP-MPs) with a diameter of 5 μm across varying concentrations (300 mg/L and 600 mg/L). Using histopathological, microbiota profiling, and transcriptomic approaches, we systematically evaluated the impact of PP-MPs exposure on the intestine and liver of zebrafish. Histopathological analysis revealed that exposure to PP-MPs resulted in thinner intestinal walls, damaged intestinal mucosa, and hepatic cellular damage. Intestinal microbiota profiling demonstrated that, the richness, uniformity, diversity, and homogeneity of gut microbes significantly increased after the PP-MPs exposure at high concentration. These alterations were accompanied by shifts in the relative abundance of microbiota associated with intestinal pathologies, suggesting a profound impact on the intestinal microbial community structure. Concurrently, hepatic transcriptome analysis and RT-qPCR indicated that the downregulation of pathways and genes associated with cell proliferation regulation and DNA damage repair mechanisms contributed to hepatic cellular damage, ultimately exerting adverse effects on the liver. Correlation analysis between the intestinal microbiota and liver transcriptome profiles further highlighted significant associations between intestinal microbiota and the downregulated hepatic pathways. Collectively, these results provide novel insights into the subacute toxicological mechanisms of PP-MPs in aquatic organisms and highlight the need for further research on the ecological and health risks associated with PP-MPs pollution.

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