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N-acetylcysteine suppresses proteasome pathway activation and muscular damage induced by microplastics and chromium nanoparticles

Environmental Pollution 2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jie Dai, Yuxuan Du, Yunjia Wang Guanteng Yang, Guanteng Yang, Yunjia Wang Yunjia Wang

Summary

Researchers found chromium nanoparticles and microplastics co-accumulating in human peri-implant muscle tissue from orthopedic patients, and showed in vitro that their combined exposure elevated reactive oxygen species and pro-inflammatory markers, while the antioxidant N-acetylcysteine suppressed the proteasome pathway activation and muscle damage.

Study Type In vitro

Under global plastic proliferation, microplastics (MPs) have become significant environmental pollutants. Annually, over one million patients undergo orthopedic surgeries involving chromium alloy implants, which release chromium nanoparticles (Cr NPs) during long-term intraosseous residence. These particles migrate to adjacent muscle tissues, potentially inducing adverse effects. This study aimed to investigate the combined impact of Cr NPs and MPs co-exposure on muscle systems and underlying mechanisms. Human tissue analysis confirmed concurrent Cr NPs and MPs accumulation in peri-implant regions. In vitro experiments showed elevated reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels and pro-inflammatory cytokine expression in C2C12 cells exposed to Cr NPs/MPs individually or combined, with synergistic enhancement under co-exposure conditions. Zebrafish models exhibited spinal deformities, reduced motility, and histopathological muscle damage following pollutant exposure. Mechanistic studies revealed proteasome pathway activation as a key mediator, evidenced by PSMD2 overexpression, Notably, N-acetylcysteine (NAC) pretreatment ameliorated co-exposure-induced muscle injury, reduced ROS accumulation, and inhibited proteasome activation. This research provides new perspectives on Cr NP/MP synergistic toxicity and identifies NAC as a potential therapeutic strategy against pollution-related muscle damage.

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