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Polystyrene Nanoplasticsat an Environmentally RelevantConcentration Promote Ovarian Cancer Progression via CDK4/6-DependentSignaling
Summary
Researchers found that polystyrene nanoplastics at environmentally relevant concentrations (20 μg/mL) promoted ovarian cancer cell proliferation through CDK4/6-dependent signaling, representing the first evidence that environmentally relevant nanoplastic levels may drive ovarian cancer progression.
Nanoplastics (NPs) are emerging global contaminants, which are known to harm respiratory, digestive, neural, and cardiovascular systems; their tumorigenic risks at environmentally relevant levels remain unclear. Here, we sought to clarify the potential promoting effects of PS-NPs on ovarian cancer. Our results first showed that ovarian cancer cells could internalize 50 nm PS-NPs, with significant internalization observed at concentrations starting from 20 μg/mL, which aligns with environmental exposure levels. RNA-seq and subsequent experiments indicated that treatment with 20 μg/mL PS-NPs significantly promoted ovarian cancer cell proliferation, and this phenotype was closely associated with CDK4/6-dependent cell cycle regulation. The CDK4/6 inhibitor Palbociclib effectively reverses the cell proliferation induced by PS-NPs. An oral exposure model in mice found tissue deposition of PS-NPs in the ovaries, kidneys, heart, and lungs. In vivo models further confirmed that mice exposed to PS-NPs had larger subcutaneous tumor weights and volumes compared to the control group, while Palbociclib could successfully block these effects. In conclusion, our research revealed that low-dose PS-NPs could stimulate ovarian tumor progression both in vivo and in vitro in a CDK4/6-dependent manner. Taken together, our study provides potential evidence for risk management of exposure to nanoplastics related to cancer development.
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