Foodborne and airborne polyethersulfone nanoplastics respectively induce liver and lung injury in mice: Comparison with microplastics

[Display omitted] •Foodborne polyethersulfone micro/nanoplastics affected gut microbiota-gut-liver axis.•Airborne polyethersulfone micro/nanoplastics disrupted airway microbiota-lung axis.•Foodborne polyethersulfone nanoplastics induced greater liver toxicity.•Airborne polyethersulfone nanoplastics...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environment international 2024-01, Vol.183, p.108350-108350, Article 108350
Hauptverfasser: Zha, Hua, Xia, Jiafeng, Wang, Kaicen, Xu, Lvwan, Chang, Kevin, Li, Lanjuan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Foodborne polyethersulfone micro/nanoplastics affected gut microbiota-gut-liver axis.•Airborne polyethersulfone micro/nanoplastics disrupted airway microbiota-lung axis.•Foodborne polyethersulfone nanoplastics induced greater liver toxicity.•Airborne polyethersulfone nanoplastics induced greater lung toxicity. Micro/nanoplastics (MNP) are ubiquitous in the environment and multiple living organisms. The toxicity of some common types of MNP, e.g., polyethersulfone (PES) MNP, remains poorly understood. Multi-omics approaches were used in this study to determine the effects of foodborne and airborne PES MNP on liver and lung, respectively. Foodborne MNP were capable of inducing gut microbial dysbiosis, gut and serum metabolic disruption, and liver transcriptomic dysregulation, and affecting serum antioxidant activity and liver function, resulting in liver injury. As for the airborne MNP, they were found to induce nasal and lung microbial dysbiosis, serum and lung metabolic disruption, and liver transcriptome disturbance, and cause disrupted serum antioxidant activity and lung injury. Foodborne and airborne PES NP were found to respectively induce greater liver and lung toxicity than MP, which could be associated with the differences between NP and MP exposures. The relevant results suggest that foodborne PES MNP could disrupt the “gut microbiota-gut-liver” axis and induce hepatic injury, while airborne PES MNP could affect the “airborne microbiota-lung” axis and cause lung injury. The findings could benefit the diagnoses of liver and lung injury respectively induced by foodborne and airborne PES MNP, as well as the proper use of PES in human living environment.
ISSN:0160-4120
1873-6750
DOI:10.1016/j.envint.2023.108350