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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. Human Health Effects Nanoplastics Sign in to save

Exposure to polystyrene nanoplastics induces hepatotoxicity involving NRF2-NLRP3 signaling pathway in mice

Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 2024 25 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yiqian Wen, Yiqian Wen, Yiqian Wen, Yiqian Wen, Shiyi Deng, Yiqian Wen, Yiqian Wen, Shiyi Deng, Yangyang Yuan, Binhui Wang, Shiyi Deng, Fan Zhang, Shiyi Deng, Yangyang Yuan, Tao Luo Haibin Kuang, Haibin Kuang, Yangyang Yuan, Haibin Kuang, Dalei Zhang, Yangyang Yuan, Yangyang Yuan, Xiaodong Kuang, Xiaodong Kuang, Jian Huang, Jian Huang, Yangyang Yuan, Yangyang Yuan, Jian Huang, Haibin Kuang, Dalei Zhang, Dalei Zhang, Dalei Zhang, Tao Luo Dalei Zhang, Tao Luo

Summary

Mice and liver cells exposed to 20-nanometer polystyrene nanoplastics developed liver damage through a specific molecular pathway involving oxidative stress and inflammation. The study showed that activating the body's natural antioxidant defense system (called NRF2) could protect against this liver injury, offering a potential avenue for reducing nanoplastic-related harm to human liver health.

Polymers
Body Systems
Models
Study Type In vivo

Nanoplastic contamination has been of intense concern by virtue of the potential threat to human and ecosystem health. Animal experiments have indicated that exposure to nanoplastics (NPs) can deposit in the liver and contribute to hepatic injury. To explore the mechanisms of hepatotoxicity induced by polystyrene-NPs (PS-NPs), mice and AML-12 hepatocytes were exposed to different dosages of 20 nm PS-NPs in this study. The results illustrated that in vitro and in vivo exposure to PS-NPs triggered excessive production of reactive oxygen species and repressed nuclear factor erythroid-derived 2-like 2 (NRF2) antioxidant pathway and its downstream antioxidase expression, thus leading to hepatic oxidative stress. Moreover, PS-NPs elevated the levels of NLRP3, IL-1β and caspase-1 expression, along with an activation of NF-κB, suggesting that PS-NPs induced hepatocellular inflammatory injury. Nevertheless, the activaton of NRF2 signaling by tert-butylhydroquinone mitigated PS-NPs-caused oxidative stress and inflammation, and inbihited NLRP3 and caspase-1 expression. Conversely, the rescuing effect of NRF2 signal activation was dramatically supressed by treatment with NRF2 inhibitor brusatol. In summary, our results demonstrated that NRF2-NLRP3 pathway is involved in PS-NPs-aroused hepatotoxicity, and the activation of NRF2 signaling can protect against PS-NPs-evoked liver injury. These results provide novel insights into the hepatotoxicity elicited by NPs exposure.

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