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Human Airway Organoids and Multimodal Imaging-Based Toxicity Evaluation of 1-Nitropyrene

Environmental Science & Technology 2024 17 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.
Zongwei Cai Jie Zhou, Yingyan Zhou, Yingyan Zhou, Zongwei Cai Cun Li, Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Yanyan Chen, Lin Zhu, Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Yifei Yu, Zongwei Cai Lin Zhu, Lin Zhu, Zongwei Cai Xin Diao, Zongwei Cai Xin Diao, Jiacheng Fang, Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Raymond Chiu, Jiacheng Fang, Raymond Chiu, Xin Diao, Jiacheng Fang, Jiacheng Fang, Xin Diao, Zongwei Cai Yuting Shen, Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Jianing Wang, Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Lin Zhu, Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Zongwei Cai Jie Zhou, Zongwei Cai

Summary

Researchers developed a new lab model using human airway organoids (miniature organ-like structures) to test how air pollutants damage respiratory cells. Using the pollutant 1-nitropyrene as a test case, they found it caused oxidative stress and disrupted fat metabolism in airway cells. While focused on a specific pollutant, this testing platform could be used to evaluate the respiratory effects of inhaled microplastics and nanoplastics on human airways.

Body Systems
Study Type In vitro

Despite significant advances in understanding the general health impacts of air pollution, the toxic effects of air pollution on cells in the human respiratory tract are still elusive. A robust, biologically relevant in vitro model for recapitulating the physiological response of the human airway is needed to obtain a thorough understanding of the molecular mechanisms of air pollutants. In this study, by using 1-nitropyrene (1-NP) as a proof-of-concept, we demonstrate the effectiveness and reliability of evaluating environmental pollutants in physiologically active human airway organoids. Multimodal imaging tools, including live cell imaging, fluorescence microscopy, and MALDI-mass spectrometry imaging (MSI), were implemented to evaluate the cytotoxicity of 1-NP for airway organoids. In addition, lipidomic alterations upon 1-NP treatment were quantitatively analyzed by nontargeted lipidomics. 1-NP exposure was found to be associated with the overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and dysregulation of lipid pathways, including the SM-Cer conversion, as well as cardiolipin in our organoids. Compared with that of cell lines, a higher tolerance of 1-NP toxicity was observed in the human airway organoids, which might reflect a more physiologically relevant response in the native airway epithelium. Collectively, we have established a novel system for evaluating and investigating molecular mechanisms of environmental pollutants in the human airways via the combinatory use of human airway organoids, multimodal imaging analysis, and MS-based analyses.

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