Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Jan 2023)

Toxicity of polystyrene nanoparticles for mouse ovary and cultured human granulosa cells

  • Jin Huang,
  • Liping Zou,
  • Meng Bao,
  • Qiwen Feng,
  • Wei Xia,
  • Changhong Zhu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 249
p. 114371

Abstract

Read online

The issue of global environmental contamination of microplastics has recently been receiving widespread attention. However, the effects of polystyrene nanoparticles (Nano-PS) on the female reproductive system remain unclear. We investigated the toxicity and explored the potential underlying mechanisms of Nano-PS in both mouse ovarian tissue in vivo and human ovarian granulosa cell lines in vitro. In vivo experiments: Mice were fed different concentrations of Nano-PS for 8 weeks. In vitro experiments: COV434 cells were treated with increasing concentrations of Nano-PS. In the present study, ovarian reserve was found to decrease significantly, while oxidative stress and apoptosis levels increased. Nano-PS increased the proportion of metestrum and diestrus periods, and decreased the proportion of estrous period. The implantation rates and the number of pups per litter decreased. In COV434 cells, Nano-PS reduced cell viability and mitochondrial membrane potential, increased the expression of apoptotic and oxidative stress markers and led to subsequent cell cycle arrest. Specifically, Nano-PS exert their toxic effects on mouse ovarian tissue and COV434 cells by inducing oxidative stress. A potential strategy to overcome this could be to activate the nuclear factor-E2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) signaling pathway to mitigate Nano-PS-induced oxidative stress.

Keywords