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Silent invaders: the role of MPs on epithelium inflammation and damage in airway diseases

Frontiers in Allergy 2026 Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Benedetta Bondi, Stefania Nicola, Federico Di Marco, Sara Chiappori, Luisa Brussino, Laura De Ferrari, A Riccio, Fulvio Braido, Diego Bagnasco

Summary

This review examines how inhaled microplastics and nanoplastics interact with airway epithelial surfaces and trigger inflammatory, oxidative, and structural changes that may contribute to respiratory diseases. The study describes how these particles activate key inflammatory pathways such as NF-kB and PI3K/Akt/mTOR, potentially worsening conditions like asthma and COPD through enhanced barrier dysfunction, oxidative stress, and disrupted tissue repair.

Microplastics (MPs) and Nanoplastics (NPs) have emerged as pervasive environmental contaminants with growing implications for respiratory health. Increasing evidence demonstrates that inhaled MPs can deposit throughout the airways, interact with epithelial surfaces, and trigger a cascade of inflammatory, oxidative, and structural alterations that may contribute to the onset or progression of airway diseases. Their pathogenicity is influenced by physicochemical properties, including size, shape, density, and surface charge, which determine their aerodynamic behavior, epithelial penetration, and cellular uptake. Once deposited, MPs are associated with epithelial stress responses, including oxidative stress, activation of inflammatory signaling pathways, and alterations in junction-related proteins, which may impair mucociliary function. Smaller particles and NPs are internalized through endocytosis, leading to mitochondrial dysfunction, reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, and activation of key inflammatory pathways such as NF-κB, PI3K/Akt/mTOR, and Wnt/β-catenin. These mechanisms promote cytokine release, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, and dysregulated repair responses. Experimental and clinical evidence indicate that MPs exacerbate epithelial fragility in asthma and COPD by amplifying oxidative stress, enhancing barrier dysfunction, and intensifying maladaptive crosstalk between epithelial and immune cells. In fibrotic pathways, persistent epithelial injury activates the NLRP3 inflammasome and drives TGF-β1-mediated fibroblast activation and extracellular matrix deposition, establishing a self-perpetuating cycle of inflammation and remodeling. Emerging data suggest a potential role for MPs in lung carcinogenesis through chronic inflammation, indirect genotoxic effects mediated by oxidative stress, and altered cellular homeostasis. Overall, MPs represent an underrecognized but increasingly relevant environmental factor capable of inducing epithelial damage, promoting chronic airway inflammation, and contributing to the pathophysiology of asthma, COPD, pulmonary fibrosis, and possibly lung cancer. Understanding these mechanisms is crucial to guide preventive strategies, regulatory policies, and future clinical research. This review critically evaluates current experimental evidence on microplastic-epithelium interactions, highlighting mechanistic insights, methodological limitations, and key gaps that must be addressed to clarify their role in airway diseases.

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