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Oral subacute polypropylene microplastics administration effect on potential immunotoxicity in ICR mice

Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health 2024 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sarina Kusma, Anju Maharjan, Manju Acharya, DaEun Lee, S. Kim, ChaeWon Hwang, Kil‐Soo Kim, HyoungAh Kim, Yong Heo, ChangYul Kim

Summary

Researchers fed two sizes of polypropylene microplastics to mice for four weeks and examined the effects on their immune systems. While major immune cell populations remained unchanged, the study found shifts in immune signaling patterns, particularly in female mice, who showed a tendency toward a type of immune response associated with allergies. The findings suggest that repeated microplastic exposure may subtly alter immune balance, with potential differences between sexes.

Polymers
Body Systems
Models

Exposure to microplastics may be associated with damage of immune system. Polypropylene microplastics (PP-MPs) with a wide range of beneficial applications have not been extensively studied with respect to the immune system. The aim of this investigation is to examine the influence of two different sizes of PP-MPs (5.2 and 23.9 μm diameter) on immune system components in ICR mice. PP-MPs were administered orally to female and male mice at 0 (corn oil vehicle), 500, 1000, or 2000 mg/kg/d for single and daily for 4-week repeated toxicity test, respectively. No significant differences were observed in number of thymic CD4+, CD8+, CD4+CD8+ T lymphocytes, splenic helper T cells, cytotoxic T cells, and B cells. The ratio of interferon-γ to interleukin-4 in culture supernatants from activated splenocytes ex vivo (48 hr) was lower in females which were repeatedly administered with PP-MPs compared to vehicle irrespective of PP-MPs size and dose. In contrast, the opposite trend was observed in males. Production of tumor necrosis factor-α was upregulated in females that were repeatedly exposed to PP-MPs. The serum IgG2a/IgG1 ratio was lowered in female receiving large-size PP-MPs. Data suggest that immune disturbances resulting in predominant type-2 helper T cell reactivity may occur in mice, especially in females, when repeatedly exposed to PP-MPs. Further investigations with longer exposure periods are necessary to determine the immunotoxicities attributed to PP-MPs.

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