Adverse outcome pathway of fine particulate matter leading to increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality: An integrated perspective from toxicology and epidemiology

Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) exposure is a major threat to public health, and is listed as one of the leading factors associated with global premature mortality. Among the adverse health effects on multiple organs or tissues, the influence of PM2.5 exposure on cardiovascular system has drawn more...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hazardous materials 2022-05, Vol.430, p.128368-128368, Article 128368
Hauptverfasser: Yu, Yang, Sun, Qinglin, Li, Tianyu, Ren, Xiaoke, Lin, Lisen, Sun, Mengqi, Duan, Junchao, Sun, Zhiwei
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container_issue
container_start_page 128368
container_title Journal of hazardous materials
container_volume 430
creator Yu, Yang
Sun, Qinglin
Li, Tianyu
Ren, Xiaoke
Lin, Lisen
Sun, Mengqi
Duan, Junchao
Sun, Zhiwei
description Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) exposure is a major threat to public health, and is listed as one of the leading factors associated with global premature mortality. Among the adverse health effects on multiple organs or tissues, the influence of PM2.5 exposure on cardiovascular system has drawn more and more attention. Although numerous studies have investigated the mechanisms responsible for the cardiovascular toxicity of PM2.5, the various mechanisms have not been integrated due to the variety of the study models, different levels of toxicity assessment endpoints, etc. Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP) framework is a useful tool to achieve this goal so as to facilitate comprehensive understanding of toxicity assessment of PM2.5 on cardiovascular system. This review aims to illustrate the causal mechanistic relationships of PM2.5-triggered cardiovascular toxicity from different levels (from molecular/cellular/organ to individual/population) by using AOP framework. Based on the AOP Wiki and published literature, we propose an AOP framework focusing on the cardiovascular toxicity induced by PM2.5 exposure. The molecular initiating event (MIE) is identified as reactive oxygen species generation, followed by the key events (KEs) of oxidative damage and mitochondria dysfunction, which induces vascular endothelial dysfunction via vascular endothelial cell autophagy dysfunction, vascular fibrosis via vascular smooth muscle cell activation, cardiac dysregulation via myocardial apoptosis, and cardiac fibrosis via fibroblast proliferation and myofibroblast differentiation, respectively; all of the above cardiovascular injuries ultimately elevate cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in the general population. As far as we know, this is the first work on PM2.5-related cardiovascular AOP construction. In the future, more work needs to be done to explore new markers in the safety assessment of cardiovascular toxicity induced by PM2.5. [Display omitted] •ROS generation is one likely molecular initiating event linking PM2.5 and cardiovascular diseases.•Mitochondrial dysfunction plays pivotal roles in PM2.5-associated cardiovascular diseases.•The axis of ROS and mitochondrial dysfunction is a general mechanism of cardiovascular toxicity in response to PM2.5.•PM2.5 exposure increases the cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in the general population.•This study is the first attempt using AOP to integrate PM2.5-related cardiovascular mechanism evidence.
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subjects Adverse outcome pathway
Adverse Outcome Pathways
Air Pollutants - metabolism
Air Pollutants - toxicity
Cardiovascular disease
Cardiovascular Diseases - chemically induced
Cardiovascular Diseases - epidemiology
Fine particulate matter
Humans
Mitochondria dysfunction
Myocardium - metabolism
Oxidative Stress
Particulate Matter - metabolism
Particulate Matter - toxicity
Reactive oxygen species
title Adverse outcome pathway of fine particulate matter leading to increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality: An integrated perspective from toxicology and epidemiology
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