Impact of polyethylene nanoplastics on human intestinal cells.

Fiche publication


Date publication

août 2024

Journal

Nanotoxicology

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr BEDUNEAU Arnaud


Tous les auteurs :
El Basset W, Cornu R, Zaiter T, Jacquin L, Pellequer Y, Moulari B, Diab-Assaf M, Brunel F, Monteil V, Béduneau A

Résumé

Polyethylene (PE) is one of the most widely used plastics in the world. Its degradation leads to the production of small particles including microplastics and nanoplastics (NPs). Plastic particles' presence poses a health risk. The aim of this work was to investigate the toxicity of two model surfactant-free PE NPs prepared by polymerization of ethylene from cationic and anionic water-soluble initiators on human cell lines Caco-2 and HT29-MTX. After physicochemical characterization, their acute and subacute toxicity profile, including cytotoxicity, oxidative stress, and genotoxicity, was evaluated on both cell lines. Results showed a size increase of PE NPs in culture medium. Zeta potential values close to -10 mV were no longer dependent on the initiator charge after adsorption of serum components in culture medium. However, the cellular toxicity of the cationic and anionic PE NPs was very different. A time-and-concentration dependent cytotoxic, oxidative, and genotoxic effects on Caco-2 cells were only observed for PE NPs prepared with cationic initiators. No toxicity was observed on HT29-MTX, likely due to the protective mucus layer. Genotoxicity correlated with oxidative stress of some PE NPs on Caco-2 cells was observed from a concentration of 0.1 mg.mL after 48-h exposure.

Mots clés

Caco-2 cells, HT29-MTX cells, Nanoplastics, polyethylene, toxicity

Référence

Nanotoxicology. 2024 08;18(5):499-510