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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. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Nanoplastics Reproductive & Development Sign in to save

In Vitro Nano-Polystyrene Toxicity: Metabolic Dysfunctions and Cytoprotective Responses of Human Spermatozoa

Biology 2023 26 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.
Martina Contino, Martina Contino, Martina Contino, Martina Contino, Martina Contino, Martina Contino, Martina Contino, Antonio Salvaggio, Martina Contino, Greta Ferruggia, Greta Ferruggia, Greta Ferruggia, Greta Ferruggia, Stefania Indelicato, Stefania Indelicato, Roberta Pecoraro, Stefania Indelicato, Stefania Indelicato, Stefania Indelicato, Stefania Indelicato, Roberta Pecoraro, Roberta Pecoraro, Roberta Pecoraro, Elena Maria Scalisi, Elena Maria Scalisi, Elena Maria Scalisi, Elena Maria Scalisi, Giovanni Bracchitta, Antonio Salvaggio, Antonio Salvaggio, Giovanni Bracchitta, Jessica Dragotto, Maria Violetta Brundo Maria Violetta Brundo Antonio Salvaggio, Antonio Salvaggio, Maria Violetta Brundo Roberta Pecoraro, Maria Violetta Brundo Elena Maria Scalisi, Maria Violetta Brundo

Summary

Researchers investigated the effects of polystyrene nanoplastics (50 and 100 nm) on mature human sperm cell metabolism in vitro. The study found that smaller 50 nm particles showed higher toxicity, causing acrosomal damage, oxidative stress, DNA fragmentation, and decreased mitochondrial activity, while 100 nm particles primarily affected the acrosome, suggesting size-dependent impacts of nanoplastics on reproductive cell function.

Polymers
Body Systems
Models
Study Type In vitro

The ubiquitous spread of Polystyrene nanoplastics (PS-NPs) has rendered chronic human exposure an unavoidable phenomenon. The biodistribution of such particles leads to bioaccumulation in target organs including the testis, the site of sperm maturation. The purpose of this research has been to estimate the impact of PS-NPs (50 and 100 nm) on the metabolism of mature spermatozoa. The analysis of the semen parameters has revealed a higher toxicity of the smaller sized PS-NPs, which have negatively affected major organelles, leading to increased acrosomal damage, oxidative stress with the production of ROS, DNA fragmentation, and decreased mitochondrial activity. PS-NPs of 100 nm, on the other hand, have mainly affected the acrosome and induced a general state of stress. An attempt has also been made to highlight possible protective mechanisms such as the expression of HSP70s and their correlation among various parameters. The results have evinced a marked production of HSP70s in the samples exposed to the smaller PS-NPs, negatively correlated with the worsening in oxidative stress, DNA fragmentation, and mitochondrial anomalies. In conclusion, our results have confirmed the toxicity of PS-NPs on human spermatozoa but have also demonstrated the presence of mechanisms capable of counteracting at least in part these injuries.

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