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Differences in sensitivity of human lymphocytes and fish lymphocytes to polyvinyl chloride microplastic toxicity

Toxicology and Industrial Health 2022 56 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Ahmad Salimi, Ali Alavehzadeh, Maral Ramezani, Jalal Pourahmad

Summary

Researchers compared the toxic effects of PVC microplastics on human blood lymphocytes versus fish blood lymphocytes. They found that human lymphocytes were significantly more sensitive, showing cytotoxicity at lower concentrations along with increased oxidative stress, lysosomal damage, mitochondrial dysfunction, and lipid peroxidation, while fish lymphocytes showed no significant changes. The study suggests that human cells may be more vulnerable to PVC microplastic toxicity than previously estimated from fish-based studies.

Polymers
Body Systems
Models
Study Type In vitro

Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) microplastics are emerging contaminants affecting biological wastewater treatment processes. So far, the toxicological investigation of PVC microplastics usually focused on the anaerobic and denitrifying bacteria. It seems that the primary lymphocytes isolated from peripheral blood are more sensitive than most other organ cell types in vitro; therefore, the aim of this study was to assess the cytotoxicity of PVC microplastic on human and fish blood lymphocytes as a useful ex vivo model for accelerated human toxicity studies. Using biochemical analyses, we showed human lymphocytes are more sensitive to toxic effects of PVC microplastic than fish lymphocytes. Our result showed that addition of PVC microplastic at 24, 48, and 96 μg/ml for 3 h to human blood lymphocytes induced cytotoxicity. The PVC microplastic-induced cytotoxicity on human blood lymphocytes was associated with intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation, lysosomal membrane injury, mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) collapse, depletion of glutathione, and lipid peroxidation. According to our results, PVC microplastic particles induce oxidative stress and organelle damage in human lymphocytes, while these significant alterations in toxicity parameters in PVC microplastic-treated fish lymphocytes were not observed. Finally, our findings suggest that human lymphocytes are more sensitive to PVC microplastic toxicity compared with fish lymphocytes.

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