Polystyrene nano-plastics impede skeletal muscle development and induce lipid accumulation via the PPARγ/LXRß pathway in vivo and in vitro in mice.
Arch Toxicol
; 98(11): 3713-3725, 2024 Nov.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39096369
ABSTRACT
Nano-plastics (NPs) have emerged as a significant environmental pollutant, widely existing in water environment, and pose a serious threat to health and safety with the intake of animals. Skeletal muscle, a vital organ for complex life activities and functional demands, has received limited attention regarding the effects of NPs. In this study, the effects of polystyrene NPs (PS-NPs) on skeletal muscle development were studied by oral administration of different sizes (1 mg/kg) of PS-NPs in mice. The findings revealed that PS-NPs resulted in skeletal muscle damage and significantly hindered muscle differentiation, exhibiting an inverse correlation with PS-NPs particle size. Morphological analysis demonstrated PS-NPs caused partial disruption of muscle fibers, increased spacing between fibers, and lipid accumulation. RT-qPCR and western blots analyses indicated that PS-NPs exposure downregulated the expression of myogenic differentiation-related factors (Myod, Myog and Myh2), activated PPARγ/LXRß pathway, and upregulated the expressions of lipid differentiation-related factors (SREBP1C, SCD-1, FAS, ACC1, CD36/FAT, ADIPOQ, C/EBPα and UCP-1). In vitro experiments, C2C12 cells were used to confirm cellular penetration of PS-NPs (0, 100, 200, 400 µg/mL) through cell membranes along with activation of PPARγ expression. Furthermore, to verify LXRß as a key signaling molecule, silencing RNA transfection experiments were conducted, resulting in no increase in the expressions of PPARγ, LXRß, SREBP1C, FAS, CD36/FAT, ADIPOQ, C/EBPα and UCP-1 even after exposure to PS-NPs. However, the expressions of SCD-1and ACC1 remained unaffected. The present study evidenced that exposure to PS-NPs induced lipid accumulation via the PPARγ/LXRß pathway thereby influencing skeletal muscle development.
Key words
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Polystyrenes
/
Muscle, Skeletal
/
PPAR gamma
/
Lipid Metabolism
Limits:
Animals
Language:
En
Journal:
Arch Toxicol
Year:
2024
Type:
Article