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Synergistic effect of polystyrene nanoplastics and contaminants on the promotion of insulin fibrillation

Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 2021 33 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Chuanxi Li, Yingying Ma, Xiao Liu, Renliang Huang, Rongxin Su, Wei Qi, Jinjing Che, Zhimin He

Summary

Researchers showed that polystyrene nanoplastics promote insulin fibrillation (linked to amyloid diseases) and that co-exposure with organic contaminants like bisphenol A and pyrene produced synergistic acceleration of fibrillation compared to either agent alone.

Polymers

Nanoplastics (NPs) are becoming an emerging pollutant of global concern. A potential risk of NPs is that they can serve as carriers and synergistically function with other contaminants to cause diseases. A variety of diseases such as Alzheimer's disease are related to the generation of amyloid fibrils, and insulin is typically used as a model to study the fibrillation process. In this study, we examined the fibrillation of insulin promoted by polystyrene nanoplastics (PSNPs) alone and synergistically with organic contaminants (denoted as X, X = pyrene, bisphenol A, 2,2',4,4'-tetrabromodiphenyl ether, 4,4'-dihydroxydiphenylmethane, or 4-nonylphenol) having different polarities using thioflavin T fluorescence assays, dynamic light scattering, and circular dichroism spectroscopy. The presence of PSNPs and small organic contaminants decreased the lag phase time (tlag) for insulin fibrillation from 54.6 h to 35-51 h and their combination (PS-X) enhanced this process (tlag = 21-30 h). Notably, the lag phase time for insulin fibrillation with PS-nonpolar contaminants, PS-weakly polar contaminants, and PS-polar contaminants is around 20.8, 26.7, and 30.1 h, respectively, indicating the synergistic effect of PS-nonpolar contaminants or PS-weakly polar contaminants was more obvious than that of PS-polar contaminants. Moreover, molecular dynamic simulation reveal the interactions between insulin and PSs or small organic contaminants are primarily driven by van der Waals forces and hydrophobic interactions. Overall, the findings of this study underscore the potentially significant environmental impact of small organic contaminants assisting NPs in promoting insulin fibrillation.

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