| Literature DB >> 31809927 |
Boqing Li1, Yunfei Ding1, Xue Cheng1, Dandan Sheng2, Zheng Xu1, Qianyu Rong1, Yulong Wu1, Huilin Zhao1, Xiaofei Ji1, Ying Zhang3.
Abstract
Environmental pollution caused by plastics has become a public health problem. However, the effect of microplastics on gut microbiota, inflammation development and their underlying mechanisms are not well characterized. In the present study, we assessed the effect of exposure to different amounts of polyethylene microplastics (6, 60, and 600 μg/day for 5 consecutive weeks) in a C57BL/6 mice model. Treatment with a high concentration of microplastics increased the numbers of gut microbial species, bacterial abundance, and flora diversity. Feeding groups showed a significant increase in Staphylococcus abundance alongside a significant decrease in Parabacteroides abundance, as compared to the blank (untreated) group. In addition, serum levels of interleukin-1α in all feeding groups were significantly greater than that in the blank group. Of note, treatment with microplastics decreased the percentage of Th17 and Treg cells among CD4+ cells, while no significant difference was observed between the blank and treatment groups with respect to the Th17/Treg cell ratio. The intestine (colon and duodenum) of mice fed high-concentration microplastics showed obvious inflammation and higher TLR4, AP-1, and IRF5 expression. Thus, polyethylene microplastics can induce intestinal dysbacteriosis and inflammation, which provides a theoretical basis for the prevention and treatment of microplastics-related diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Gut microbiota; Inflammation response; Mice; Microplastics; Polyethylene
Year: 2019 PMID: 31809927 DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.125492
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemosphere ISSN: 0045-6535 Impact factor: 7.086