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Nanoplastic Exposure at Predicted Environmental Concentrations Induces Activation of Germline Ephrin Signal Associated with Toxicity Formation in the Caenorhabditis elegans Offspring

Toxics 2022 33 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.
Xin Hua, Xin Hua, Yue Zhao, Xin Hua, Xin Hua, Xin Hua, Xin Hua, Xin Hua, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Yue Zhao, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Xin Hua, Xin Hua, Xin Hua, Xin Hua, Xin Hua, Qian Bian, Qian Bian, Yue Zhao, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Qian Bian, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Qian Bian, Qian Bian, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Qian Bian, Qian Bian, Dayong Wang Qian Bian, Qian Bian, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Qian Bian, Dayong Wang Qian Bian, Dayong Wang

Summary

Researchers discovered that nanoplastic exposure at environmentally relevant concentrations activates the germline Ephrin signaling pathway in C. elegans, revealing a molecular mechanism underlying transgenerational toxicity formation in offspring.

Polymers

In nematode <i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i>, exposure to polystyrene nanoparticles (PS-NPs) at predicted environmental concentrations can cause induction of transgenerational toxicity. However, the underlying mechanisms for toxicity formation of PS-NP in the offspring remain largely unknown. In this study, based on high-throughput sequencing, Ephrin ligand EFN-3 was identified as a target of KSR-1/2 (two kinase suppressors of Ras) in the germline during the control of transgenerational PS-NP toxicity. At parental generation (P0-G), exposure to 0.1-10 μg/L PS-NP caused the increase in expression of germline <i>efn-3</i>, and this increase in germline <i>efn-3</i> expression could be further detected in the offspring, such as F1-G and F2-G. Germline RNAi of <i>efn-3</i> caused a resistance to transgenerational PS-NP toxicity, suggesting that the activation of germline EFN-3 at P0-G mediated transgenerational PS-NP toxicity. In the offspring, Ephrin receptor VAB-1 was further activated by the increased EFN-3 caused by PS-NP exposure at P0-G, and RNAi of <i>vab-1</i> also resulted in resistance to transgenerational PS-NP toxicity. VAB-1 acted in both the neurons and the germline to control toxicity of PS-NP in the offspring. In the neurons, VAB-1 regulated PS-NP toxicity by suppressing expressions of DBL-1, JNK-1, MPK-1, and GLB-10. In the germline, VAB-1 regulated PS-NP toxicity by increasing NDK-1 and LIN-23 expressions and decreasing EGL-1 expression. Therefore, germline Ephrin ligand EFN-3 and its receptor VAB-1 acted together to mediate the formation of transgenerational PS-NP toxicity. Our data highlight the important role of activation in germline Ephrin signals in mediating transgenerational toxicity of nanoplastics at predicted environmental concentrations in organisms.

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