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Probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics to prevent or combat air pollution consequences: The gut-lung axis
2022
Keulers, Loret | Dehghani, Ali | Knippels, Leon | Garssen, J. | Papadopoulos, Nikolaos | Folkerts, Gert | Braber, Saskia | van Bergenhenegouwen, Jeroen
Air pollution exposure is a public health emergency, which attributes globally to an estimated seven million deaths on a yearly basis We are all exposed to air pollutants, varying from ambient air pollution hanging over cities to dust inside the home. It is a mixture of airborne particulate matter and gases that can be subdivided into three categories based on particle diameter. The smallest category called PM₀.₁ is the most abundant. A fraction of the particles included in this category might enter the blood stream spreading to other parts of the body. As air pollutants can enter the body via the lungs and gut, growing evidence links its exposure to gastrointestinal and respiratory impairments and diseases, like asthma, rhinitis, respiratory tract infections, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, and abdominal pain. It has become evident that there exists a crosstalk between the respiratory and gastrointestinal tracts, commonly referred to as the gut-lung axis. Via microbial secretions, metabolites, immune mediators and lipid profiles, these two separate organ systems can influence each other. Well-known immunomodulators and gut health stimulators are probiotics, prebiotics, together called synbiotics. They might combat air pollution-induced systemic inflammation and oxidative stress by optimizing the microbiota composition and microbial metabolites, thereby stimulating anti-inflammatory pathways and strengthening mucosal and epithelial barriers. Although clinical studies investigating the role of probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics in an air pollution setting are lacking, these interventions show promising health promoting effects by affecting the gastrointestinal- and respiratory tract. This review summarizes the current data on how air pollution can affect the gut-lung axis and might impact gut and lung health. It will further elaborate on the potential role of probiotics, prebiotics and synbiotics on the gut-lung axis, and gut and lung health.
Show more [+] Less [-]Chronic carbon black nanoparticles exposure increases lung cancer risk by affecting the cell cycle via circulatory inflammation
2022
Zhang, Jianzhong | Li, Xin | Cheng, Wenting | Li, Yanting | Shi, Teng | Jiang, Yingying | Wang, Tao | Wang, Hongmei | Ren, Dunqiang | Zhang, Rong | Zheng, Yuxin | Tang, Jinglong
As a widely used pure elemental carbon in colloidal particles, carbon black was listed as a group 2B carcinogen by IARC in 2010. The most available mechanism information about carbon black and carcinogenesis are from in vivo or in vitro studies. However, few studies concerned the nanoparticle's real-ambient exposure causing systemic change and further affecting the target organ. Herein, we used an ex vivo biosensor assay to investigate the transcriptome change of primary bronchial epithelial cells after treatment with the plasma from workers with long-term occupational carbon black exposure history. Based on ex vivo biosensor assay and transcriptome sequencing, we found the effect of internal systemic environment on epithelial cells after carbon black exposure was an inflammatory response, which mainly activates cell cycle-related pathways. After exposure to carbon black, the internal systemic environment could activate cancer-related pathways like epithelial-mesenchymal transition, hypoxia, TNF-α signaling via NF-κB. The hub genes in the carbon black group (CDC20 and PLK1) and their correlation with the systemic environment were uncovered by constructing the protein-protein interaction network. Inflammatory cytokines, especially CRP, were strongly correlated with the expression of CDC20 and PLK1. Besides, we also find a strong correlation between CDC20 and cytokinesis-block micronucleus endpoints in peripheral blood (rho = 0.591, P < 0.001). Our results show that long-term carbon black exposure might activate cell cycle-related pathways through circulating inflammation and increase the risk of cancer, while the oxidative stress caused by diesel exhaust particles are mainly related to PAHs exposure. After exposure to carbon black, the systemic environment could activate cancer-related pathways like diesel exhaust particles, increasing the risk of lung cancer. These attempts might provide a further understanding of the indirect effect of chronic occupational inhaled carbon black exposure on pulmonary carcinogenesis.
Show more [+] Less [-]Endoplasmic reticulum stress aggravates copper-induced apoptosis via the PERK/ATF4/CHOP signaling pathway in duck renal tubular epithelial cells
2021
Wang, Xiaoyu | Zhuang, Yu | Fang, Yukun | Cao, Huabin | Zhang, Caiying | Xing, Chenghong | Guo, Xiaoquan | Li, Guyue | Liu, Ping | Hu, Guoliang | Yang, Fan
Copper (Cu) is a vital micronutrient required for numerous fundamental biological processes, but excessive Cu poses potential detrimental effects on public and ecosystem health. However, the molecular details linking endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and apoptosis in duck renal tubular epithelial cells have not been fully elucidated. In this study, duck renal tubular epithelial cells exposed to Cu sulfate (CuSO₄) (0, 100 and 200 μM) and a PERK inhibitor (GSK2606414, GSK, 1 μM) for 12 h were used to investigate the crosstalk between ER stress and apoptosis under Cu exposure. Cell and ER morphological and functional characteristics, intracellular calcium (Ca²⁺) levels, apoptotic rates, ER stress and apoptosis-related mRNA and protein levels were examined. The results showed that excessive Cu could cause ER expansion and swelling, increase the expression levels of ER stress-associated genes (PERK, eIF2α, ATF4 and CHOP) and proteins (p-PERK and CHOP), induce intracellular Ca²⁺ overload, upregulate the expression levels of apoptosis-associated genes (Bax, Bak1, Caspase9 and Caspase3) and the cleaved-Caspase3 protein, downregulate Bcl-xl and Bcl2 mRNA levels and trigger apoptosis. PERK inhibitor treatment could ameliorate the above changed factors caused by Cu. In conclusion, these findings indicate that excessive Cu could trigger ER stress via activation of the PERK/ATF4/CHOP signaling pathway and that ER stress might aggravate Cu-induced apoptosis in duck renal tubular epithelial cells.
Show more [+] Less [-]Mechanism of thorium-nitrate and thorium-dioxide induced cytotoxicity in normal human lung epithelial cells (WI26): Role of oxidative stress, HSPs and DNA damage
2021
Das, Sourav Kumar | Ali, Manjoor | Shetake, Neena G. | Dumpala, Rama Mohan R. | Pandey, Badri N. | Kumar, Amit
Inhalation represents the most prevalent route of exposure with Thorium-232 compounds (Th-nitrate/Th-dioxide)/Th-containing dust in real occupational scenario. The present study investigated the mechanism of Th response in normal human alveolar epithelial cells (WI26), exposed to Th-nitrate or colloidal Th-dioxide (1–100 μg/ml, 24–72 h). Assessment in terms of changes in cell morphology, cell proliferation (cell count), plasma membrane integrity (lactate dehydrogenase leakage) and mitochondrial metabolic activity (MTT reduction) showed that Th-dioxide was quantitatively more deleterious than Th-nitrate to WI26 cells. TEM and immunofluorescence analysis suggested that Th-dioxide followed a clathrin/caveolin-mediated endocytosis, however, membrane perforation/non-endocytosis seemed to be the mode of Th internalization in cells exposed to Th-nitrate. Th-estimation by ICP-MS showed significantly higher uptake of Th in cells treated with Th-dioxide than with Th-nitrate at a given concentration. Both Th-dioxide and nitrate were found to increase the level of reactive oxygen species, which seemed to be responsible for lipid peroxidation, alteration in mitochondrial membrane potential and DNA-damage. Amongst HSPs, the protein levels of HSP70 and HSP90 were affected differentially by Th-nitrate/dioxide. Specific inhibitors of ATM (KU55933) or HSP90 (17AAG) were found to increase the Th- cytotoxicity suggesting prosurvival role of these signaling molecules in rescuing the cells from Th-toxicity.
Show more [+] Less [-]Exposure to fipronil induces cell cycle arrest, DNA damage, and apoptosis in porcine trophectoderm and endometrial epithelium, leading to implantation defects during early pregnancy
2021
Park, Wonhyoung | Lim, Whasun | Song, Gwonhwa
Fipronil, a phenyl-pyrazole insecticide, has a wide range of uses, from agriculture to veterinary medicine. Due to its large-scale applications, the risk of environmental and occupational exposure and bioaccumulation raises concerns. Moreover, relatively little is known about the intracellular mechanisms of fipronil in trophoblasts and the endometrium involved in implantation. Here, we demonstrated that fipronil reduced the viability of porcine trophectoderm and luminal epithelial cells. Fipronil induced cell cycle arrest at the sub-G1 phase and apoptotic cell death through DNA fragmentation and inhibition of DNA replication. These reactions were accompanied by homeostatic changes, including mitochondrial depolarization and cytosolic calcium depletion. In addition, we found that exposure to fipronil compromised the migration and implantation ability of pTr and pLE cells. Moreover, alterations in PI3K-AKT and MAPK-ERK1/2 signal transduction were observed in fipronil-treated pTr and pLE cells. Finally, the antiproliferative and apoptotic effects of fipronil were also demonstrated in 3D cell culture conditions. In summary, our results suggest that fipronil impairs implantation potentials in fetal trophectoderm and maternal endometrial cells during early pregnancy.
Show more [+] Less [-]Physiological plasticity and acclimatory responses to salinity stress are ion-specific in the mayfly, Neocloeon triangulifer
2021
Orr, Sarah E. | Negrão Watanabe, Tatiane Terumi | Buchwalter, David B.
Freshwater salinization is a rapidly emerging ecological issue and is correlated with significant declines in aquatic biodiversity. It remains unclear how changing salinity regimes affect the physiology of sensitive aquatic insects. We used the parthenogenetic mayfly, Neocloeon triangulifer, to ask how ionic exposure history alters physiological processes and responses to subsequent major ion exposures. Using radiotracers (²²Na, ³⁵SO₄, and ⁴⁵Ca), we observed that mayflies chronically reared in elevated sodium or sulfate (157 mg L⁻¹ Na or 667 mg L⁻¹ SO₄) had 2-fold (p < 0.0001) and 8-fold (p < 0.0001) lower ion uptake rates than mayflies reared in dilute control water (16 mg L⁻¹ Na and 23 mg L⁻¹ SO₄) and subsequently transferred to elevated salinities, respectively. These acclimatory ion transport changes provided protection in 96-h toxicity bioassays for sodium, but not sulfate. Interestingly, calcium uptake was uniformly much lower and minimally influenced by exposure history, but was poorly tolerated in the toxicity bioassays. With qRT-PCR, we observed that the expression of many ion transporter genes in mayflies was influenced by elevated salinity in an ion-specific manner (general upregulation in response to sulfate, downregulation in response to calcium). Elevated sodium exposure had minimal influence on the same genes. Finally, we provide novel light microscopic evidence of histomorphological changes within the epithelium of the Malpighian tubules (insect primary excretory system) that undergoes cellular degeneration and necrosis secondary to calcium toxicity. We conclude that physiological plasticity to salinity stress is ion-specific and provide evidence for ion-specific toxicity mechanisms in N. triangulifer.
Show more [+] Less [-]Characterization, pro-inflammatory response and cytotoxic profile of bioaerosols from urban and rural residential settings in Pune, India
2020
Roy, Ritwika | Jan, Rohi | Joshi, Uttara | Bhor, Renuka | Pai, Kalpana | Satsangi, P Gursumeeran
Microbiota associated with airborne particulate matter (PM) is an important indicator of indoor pollution as they can be pathogenic and cause serious health threats to the exposed occupants. Present study aimed to investigate the level of culturable microbes associated with PM and their toxicological characterization in urban and rural houses of Pune city. Highest concentration of bacterial aerosols observed to be associated with PM₁₀ size fraction in urban site (2136 ± 285 CFU/m³) whereas maximum fungal concentration has been measured in rural houses (1521 ± 302 CFU/m³). Predominantly found bacterial species were Bacillus sp., S. aureus, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa and fungal species were Aspergillus sp., Cladosporium sp., and Penicillium sp. in both urban and rural residential premises. Concentration of endotoxin measured using the kinetic Limulus Amebocyte Lysate assay exhibited that the level of endotoxin in both urban and rural sites are associated with household characteristics and the activities performed in indoor as well as outdoor. Cell free DTT assay confirmed the ability of these airborne microbes to induce the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) varying along with the types of microorganisms. On exposure of A549 cells to airborne microbes, a significant decrease in cell viability was observed in terms of both necrosis and apoptosis pathway. Elevated production of nitric oxide (NO) and proinflammatory cytokines in epithelial cells and macrophages clearly suggest the inflammatory nature of these airborne microbes. Results derived from the present study demonstrated that the indoor air of urban and rural houses of Pune is contaminated in terms of microbial load. Therefore, attention should be paid to control the factors favoring the microbial growth in order to safeguard the health of exposed inhabitants.
Show more [+] Less [-]Nitrate exposure induces intestinal microbiota dysbiosis and metabolism disorder in Bufo gargarizans tadpoles
2020
Xie, Lei | Zhang, Yuhui | Gao, Jinshu | Li, Xinyi | Wang, Hongyuan
Excess nitrate has been reported to be associated with many adverse effects in humans and experimental animals. However, there is a paucity of information of the effects of nitrate on intestinal microbial community. In this study, the effects of nitrate on development, intestinal microbial community, and metabolites of Bufo gargarizans tadpoles were investigated. B. gargarizans were exposed to control, 5, 20 and 100 mg/L nitrate-nitrogen (NO₃–N) from eggs to Gosner stage 38. Our data showed that the body size of tadpoles significantly decreased in the 20 and 100 mg/L NO₃–N treatment group when compared to control tadpoles. Exposure to 20 and 100 mg/L NO₃–N also caused indistinct cell boundaries and nuclear pyknosis of mucosal epithelial cells in intestine of tadpoles. In addition, exposure to NO₃–N significantly altered the intestinal microbiota diversity and structure. The facultative anaerobic Proteobacteria occupy the niche of the obligately anaerobic Bacteroidetes and Fusobacteria under the pressure of NO₃–N exposure. According to the results of functional prediction, NO₃–N exposure affected the fatty acid metabolism pathway and amino acid metabolism pathway. The whole-body fatty acid components were found to be changed after exposure to 100 mg/L NO₃–N. Therefore, we concluded that exposure to 20 and 100 mg/L NO₃–N could induce deficient nutrient absorption in intestine, resulting in malnutrition of B. gargarizans tadpoles. High levels of NO₃–N could also change the intestinal microbial communities, causing dysregulation of fatty acid metabolism and amino acid metabolism in B. gargarizans tadpoles.
Show more [+] Less [-]Toxic effects and mechanisms of three commonly used fungicides on the human colon adenocarcinoma cell line Caco-2
2020
Tao, Huaping | Bao, Zhiwei | Jin, Cuiyuan | Miao, Wenyu | Fu, Zhengwei | Jin, Yuanxiang
Fungicides, usually refer to the chemical agents that can effectively control or kill the pathogenic microorganisms. Here, we revealed the effects of three different fungicides, imazalil (IMZ), chlorothalonil (CTL) and carbendazim (CBZ), which are typical broad-spectrum fungicides that are detected at high levels in the natural environment, on heterogeneous human epithelial colorectal cells (Caco-2 cells). All three fungicides had the potential to induce different degrees of toxicity, cause apoptosis, reactive oxygen species (ROS) and even change the cell cycle in the cells. The half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) of CTL is the lowest among these three fungicides, suggesting that it may have the highest exposure risk, followed by IMZ, and CBZ. The results of the real-time PCR, Western blotting, and mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) assays and the activities of key enzymes suggested that CTL induced apoptosis in Caco-2 cells via a mitochondrial-dependent pathway, as indicated by the upregulation of the expression of the apoptotic p53 and bax genes, the increase of the apoptosis marker cytochrome-c, the decrease of mRNA level of bcl-2 gene, and the decrease in the MMP. Exposure to two other fungicides also upregulated the transcriptional level of bax and the expression of cytochrome-c, but the mRNA level of bcl-2 was increased (IMZ) or unchanged (CBZ), suggesting that other pathways may be involved in the induction of cellular apoptosis by these two fungicides. In addition, all three of the fungicides could induce oxidative stress in Caco-2 cells. Our data showed that the three different kinds of fungicides all caused toxic effects in Caco-2 cells through various pathways.
Show more [+] Less [-]Exposure to etoxazole induces mitochondria-mediated apoptosis in porcine trophectoderm and uterine luminal epithelial cells
2020
Park, Wonhyoung | Lim, Whasun | Park, Sunwoo | Whang, Kwang-Youn | Song, Gwonhwa
Etoxazole is an organofluorine insecticide widely used in agriculture. Exposure to insecticides is a serious environmental problem owing to their cytotoxic effects in humans and animals. Reproductive toxicity of various organofluorine insecticides have been shown in previous studies. However, few studies have evaluated the toxicity of etoxazole in mammals. We aimed to examine the toxic effects of etoxazole in porcine trophectoderm (pTr) and uterine luminal epithelial (pLE) cells. To estimate the effects of etoxazole, we conducted assays after treatment with multiple concentration of etoxazole (0, 2, 4, 6 and 9 μM) to pTr and pLE cells for 0–72 h. Etoxazole decreased the cell proliferation, viability, and migration of pTr and pLE cells. Further, etoxazole induced apoptosis via cell cycle arrest and disruption of mitochondrial membrane potential. We also found that pro-apoptotic proteins and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress-response proteins were activated in response to etoxazole. Finally, we observed that etoxazole altered the PI3K/AKT and MAPK signaling pathways and the mRNA expression of genes associated with implantation. Collectively, these results suggest that etoxazole disrupts normal cellular physiology and might cause early implantation failure.
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