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Endoplasmic reticulum stress-controlled autophagic pathway promotes polystyrene microplastics-induced myocardial dysplasia in birds

Environmental Pollution 2022 47 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Yue Zhang, Dongxu Wang, Kai Yin, Kai Yin, Hongjing Zhao, Hongmin Lu, Xin Meng, Xin Meng, Lulu Hou, Junbo Li, Mingwei Xing

Summary

Researchers exposed chicks to different concentrations of polystyrene microplastics to study their effects on heart development. The study found that microplastics triggered endoplasmic reticulum stress and disrupted autophagy pathways in cardiac tissue, leading to myocardial dysplasia in exposed birds.

Polymers
Body Systems
Study Type In vivo

In complex ecosystems, birds are generally long-lived and occupy high trophic positions, making them good bioindicators for monitoring environmental contaminants. The effects of microplastics (MPs) on myocardial development in bird is currently unknown. Chicks, as a high trophic level terrestrial bird, may be more affected by MPs exposure and. Therefore, we established an in vivo model of chicks exposed to different concentrations of polystyrene microplastics (PS-MPs) and selected 12-day-old chicken embryos in vitro to extract primary cardiomyocytes to further investigate the potential molecular mechanisms of the effect of PS-MPs on myocardial development in birds. Histopathological observations revealed that the PS-MPs treated exhibited loose and irregular myocardial arrangement, large cell gaps and broken myocardial fiber bundles. More mechanistically, TnnT2, Nkx2-5, Gata4, TBX5 and ACTN2 were down-regulated, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress markers GRP78, PERK, eIF2α, IRE1, ATF4, ATF6 and CHOP were overexpressed, autophagy-related genes LC3, ATG5, Beclin1 and P62 were down-expressed after PS-MPs exposure, and the addition of 4PBA effectively deregulated the above aberrant expression. Hence, our report indicated that PS-MPs induced myocardial dysplasia in birds is mainly attributed to the ER stress-mediated autophagic pathway. This provided data supporting the protection of birds from the health risks of MPs pollution. More critically, the study of cardiac developmental toxicity in birds may help to better explain or solve the problem of MPs pollution in complex ecosystems.

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