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Multiomics Reveals Nonphagocytosable Microplastics Induce Colon Inflammatory Injury via Bile Acid-Gut Microbiota Interactions and Barrier Dysfunction

ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 53 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Junjie Chen, Yixian Cheng, Rui Fu, Xinyu Chen, Peng Zhang, Yunzhuo Lu, Bingsheng Liu, Peng Chen, Jiahao Wang, Haikun Cao, Jinghua Gu, Haosong Chen, Zilong Jiang, Ting Li, Jiawei Zhang, Bo Chen, Guodong Cao

Summary

Researchers used multi-omics analysis to understand how large microplastics that cannot be absorbed by intestinal cells still cause colon inflammation in mice. They found that long-term oral exposure to polystyrene microplastics disrupted bile acid metabolism and gut barrier function, leading to the accumulation of specific bile acids that triggered cell death in colon tissue. The study reveals a novel mechanism linking microplastic exposure to intestinal inflammation through bile acid-gut microbiota interactions.

Polymers
Models
Study Type In vivo

Microplastics (MPs), as emerging global environmental pollutants, exhibit intestinal toxicity mechanisms that are closely associated with the particle size. Nonphagocytosable MPs (NPMs), though incapable of being internalized by intestinal epithelial cells, still provoke colonic inflammatory damage. However, the exact mechanisms remain elusive. This study established a BALB/c mouse model subjected to long-term oral exposure to 10 μm polystyrene MPs (PS MPs) to comprehensively explore how NPMs induce colonic inflammation and injury. The results demonstrate that prolonged PS MPs exposure disrupts the colonic redox balance, leading to oxidative stress. Simultaneously, it disturbs intestinal immune homeostasis by elevating the Th17/Treg cell ratio and upregulating pro-inflammatory cytokines. Additionally, PS MPs notably compromise intestinal mechanical barrier function, diminishing mucin secretion and downregulating tight junction protein expression. Multiomics analysis further uncovered that PS MPs induce bile acid (BA) metabolic dysregulation by interfering with liver function and gut microbiota, causing a marked accumulation of total bile acids in the colon, especially conjugated BAs. Both in vitro and in vivo experiments confirmed that specific concentrations of taurochenodeoxycholic acid (TCDCA) activate the reactive oxygen species-mitochondrial pathway, triggering apoptosis in colonic epithelial cells and exacerbating PS MPs-induced colonic inflammatory injury. This study provides the first evidence of a cross-organ regulatory mechanism in which NPMs mediate intestinal toxicity via the "liver-BA-gut axis," offering novel theoretical insights for assessing the intestinal toxicity of MPs.

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