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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Human Health Effects Sign in to save

Polystyrene microplastics induce hepatotoxicity and disrupt lipid metabolism in the liver organoids

The Science of The Total Environment 2021 279 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Wei Cheng, Hui Wang Hui Wang Wei Cheng, Yue Zhou, Wei Cheng, Wei Cheng, Wei Cheng, Hui Wang Hui Wang Yue Zhou, Yue Zhou, Hui Wang Yue Zhou, Hui Wang Xiaolan Li, Xiaolan Li, Hui Wang Huaqi Guo, Hui Wang Hui Wang Hui Wang Hui Wang Hui Wang Hui Wang Yue Zhou, Huaqi Guo, Hui Wang Hui Wang Huaqi Guo, Yan Feng, Yue Zhou, Hui Wang Hui Wang Wei Cheng, Huaqi Guo, Hui Wang Hui Wang Hui Wang Hui Wang Hui Wang Yan Feng, Hui Wang Wei Cheng, Yue Zhou, Hui Wang Hui Wang Hui Wang Huaqi Guo, Yan Feng, Hui Wang Hui Wang Hui Wang Hui Wang Yan Li, Hengyi Yu, Hui Wang Yan Li, Hui Wang Hui Wang Yichun Xie, Yan Feng, Hui Wang Yichun Xie, Hui Wang Yan Wang, Yan Wang, Hui Wang Yan Wang, Hui Wang Hui Wang Hui Wang Yan Feng, Wei Cheng, Wei Cheng, Hui Wang Hui Wang Yan Li, Hui Wang Hui Wang Hui Wang Huaqi Guo, Huaqi Guo, Huaqi Guo, Hui Wang Yan Feng, Hui Wang Yan Feng, Yan Feng, Hui Wang Huaqi Guo, Yan Wang, Yan Wang, Yan Li, Yan Li, Yan Feng, Yan Wang, Hui Wang

Summary

Using lab-grown human liver organoids, researchers showed that polystyrene microplastics caused liver cell damage even at concentrations found in the environment. The microplastics disrupted fat metabolism, increased harmful reactive oxygen species, and triggered inflammation in the liver tissue. This study provides early evidence that microplastic exposure could contribute to liver problems like fatty liver disease in humans.

Polymers
Body Systems
Study Type In vitro

Microplastic particles (MP) has been detected in the environment widespread. Human beings are inevitably exposed to MP via multiple routines. However, the hazard identifications, as direct evidence of exposure and health risk, have not been fully characterized in human beings. Many studies suggest the liver is a potential target organ, but currently no study regarding the MP on human liver has been reported. In this study, we used a novel in vitro 3D model, the liver organoids (LOs) generated from human pluripotent stem cells, as an alternative model to the human liver, to explore the adverse biological effect of 1 μm polystyrene-MP (PS-MP) microbeads applying a non-static exposure approach. When the LOs were exposed to 0.25, 2.5 and 25 μg/mL PS-MP (the lowest one was relevant to the environmental concentrations, calculated to be 102 ± 7 items/mL). The potential mechanisms of PS-MP induced hepatotoxicity and lipotoxicity, in aspects of cytotoxicity, levels of key molecular markers, ATP production, alteration in lipid metabolism, ROS generation, oxidative stress and inflammation response, were determined. Specifically, it has been firstly observed that PS-MP could increase the expression of hepatic HNF4A and CYP2E1. Based on these findings, the potential adverse outcome pathways (AOPs) relevant to PS-MP were proposed, and the potential risks of PS-MP on liver steatosis, fibrosis and cancer were implicated. The combined application of novel LOs model and AOPs framework provides a new insight into the risk assessment of MP. Further studies are anticipated to validate the hepatotoxic molecular mechanism of PS-MP based on HNF4A or CYP2E1, and to investigate the MP-induced physical damage and its relationship to hepatic adverse effect for human beings. CAPSULE: Microplastics cause hepatotoxicity and disrupt lipid metabolism in the human pluripotent stem cells-derived liver organoids, providing evidence for human implication.

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