TY - JOUR
T1 - Polystyrene Micro(nano)plastic-Induced Ca2+ Disorder Activates Endoplasmic Reticulum and Mitochondrial Signaling Pathways to Synergistically Promote Apoptosis in Human Lung Cells
AU - He, Qingyun
AU - Zhang, Yanhao
AU - Zhu, Lin
AU - Peng, Zifang
AU - Liu, Mingyuan
AU - Hou, Shijiao
AU - Pei, Congcong
AU - Yin, Dan
AU - Zhang, Shusheng
AU - Cai, Zongwei
N1 - We thank the Natural Science Foundation of Henan Province (242300421128), the Key Scientific Research Project of Universities in Henan Province (24A150043), and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (22106129 and 22376190). We are also thankful for the use of the analytical instrument from the Center of Advanced Analysis and Gene Sequencing, Zhengzhou University.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2025/6/30
Y1 - 2025/6/30
N2 - Micro(nano)plastics (MNPs) are a global environmental issue that threatens human health. As a representative class of MNP, polystyrene (PS) has been widely detected in the atmosphere. However, study on its toxicity toward the human respiratory system remains incomplete. Previous works have investigated toxicological mechanisms of PS in human normal lung (BEAS-2B) cells based on a single signaling pathway, which is partial and inadequate. In this work, by analyzing key protein level changes, fluorescence colocalization, and pathway inhibition, PS exposure-induced Ca2+ disorder was found to simultaneously activate endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (IRE1α-XBP 1s-Chop and caspase 12) and mitochondrial signaling pathways to promote BEAS-2B cell apoptosis. By exposing these cells to different particle sizes (20, 100, and 1000 nm) and concentrations (100, 250, and 500 μg mL-1) of PS, the rule of different signaling pathways that synergistically induce toxicity in BEAS-2B cells was discerned. Conditional appearance of caspase 12 pathway and sustained coactivation of IRE1α-XBP 1s-Chop and mitochondrial pathways were proved to be related to effective PS deposition and mitochondria-associated ER membrane mediation, respectively. The synergistic signaling pathways causing aberrant BEAS-2B cell apoptosis under environmentally relevant dosages highlight the complexity of PS toxicity in the respiratory system. These results provide a new insight into the toxicological mechanisms of MNP in the human body.
AB - Micro(nano)plastics (MNPs) are a global environmental issue that threatens human health. As a representative class of MNP, polystyrene (PS) has been widely detected in the atmosphere. However, study on its toxicity toward the human respiratory system remains incomplete. Previous works have investigated toxicological mechanisms of PS in human normal lung (BEAS-2B) cells based on a single signaling pathway, which is partial and inadequate. In this work, by analyzing key protein level changes, fluorescence colocalization, and pathway inhibition, PS exposure-induced Ca2+ disorder was found to simultaneously activate endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (IRE1α-XBP 1s-Chop and caspase 12) and mitochondrial signaling pathways to promote BEAS-2B cell apoptosis. By exposing these cells to different particle sizes (20, 100, and 1000 nm) and concentrations (100, 250, and 500 μg mL-1) of PS, the rule of different signaling pathways that synergistically induce toxicity in BEAS-2B cells was discerned. Conditional appearance of caspase 12 pathway and sustained coactivation of IRE1α-XBP 1s-Chop and mitochondrial pathways were proved to be related to effective PS deposition and mitochondria-associated ER membrane mediation, respectively. The synergistic signaling pathways causing aberrant BEAS-2B cell apoptosis under environmentally relevant dosages highlight the complexity of PS toxicity in the respiratory system. These results provide a new insight into the toxicological mechanisms of MNP in the human body.
KW - BEAS-2B cell apoptosis
KW - endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondrial signaling pathways
KW - polystyrene-induced Ca2+ disorder
KW - Synergistic effect
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105009540728
U2 - 10.1021/acs.est.5c00380
DO - 10.1021/acs.est.5c00380
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:105009540728
SN - 0013-936X
JO - Environmental Science and Technology
JF - Environmental Science and Technology
ER -