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Nanoplastics exposure induces vascular malformation by interfering with the VEGFA/VEGFR pathway in zebrafish (Danio rerio)

Chemosphere 2022 31 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Meilan Feng, Lu Dai, Meilan Feng, Xiaoqian Cao, Juanjuan Luo, Juanjuan Luo, Meilan Feng, Meilan Feng, Meilan Feng, Meilan Feng, Maya Zhe Wang, Jiannan Zhang, Jiannan Zhang, Xiaojun Yang Jiannan Zhang, Jiannan Zhang, Xiaoqian Cao, Juanjuan Luo, Maya Zhe Wang, Juanjuan Luo, Xiaojun Yang Juan Li, Lu Dai, Xiaoqian Cao, Juan Li, Xiaojun Yang

Summary

Researchers found that nanoplastics exposure causes vascular malformation in zebrafish embryos by disrupting the VEGFA/VEGFR signaling pathway, providing new insight into how plastic nanoparticles can impair cardiovascular development.

Body Systems

The widespread accumulation and adverse effects of nanoplastics (NPs) are a growing concern for environmental and human health. However, the potential toxicological effects of nanoplastics, especially on vascular development, have not been well studied. In this study, the zebrafish model was utilized to systematically study the developmental toxicity of nanoplastics exposure at different concentrations with morphological, histological, and molecular levels. The results revealed developmental defects in zebrafish embryos after exposure to different concentrations of nanoplastics. Specifically, the morphological deformities, including pericardial oedema and spine curvature, as well as the abnormal body length and the rates of survival and hatching were induced after nanoplastics exposure in zebrafish embryos. In addition, we found that nanoplastics exposure could induce vascular malformation, including the ectopic sprouting of intersegmental vessels (ISVs), malformation of superficial ocular vessels (SOVs), and overgrowth of the common cardinal vein (CCV), as well as the disorganized vasculature of the subintestinal venous plexus (SIVP). Moreover, further study indicated that SU5416, a specific vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR) inhibitor, partially rescued the nanoplastics exposure-impaired vasculature, suggesting that the VEGFA/VEGFR pathway might be associated with nanoplastics-induced vascular malformation in zebrafish embryos. Further quantitative polymerase chain reaction assays revealed that the mRNA levels of VEGFA/VEGFR pathway-related genes, including vegfa, nrp1, klf6a, flt1, fih-1, flk1, cldn5a, and rspo3, were altered in different groups, indicating that nanoplastics exposure interferes with the VEGFA/VEGFR pathway, thereby inducing vascular malformation during the early developmental stage in zebrafish embryos. Therefore, our findings illustrated that nanoplastics might induce vascular malformation by regulating VEGFA/VEGFR pathway-related genes at the early developmental stage in zebrafish.

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