Microplastics inhibit macrophage bioenergetics impairing homeostatic function and immune responsiveness

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Microplastics inhibit macrophage bioenergetics impairing homeostatic function and immune responsiveness

Authors

Dhupar, R.; Udoh, H. M.; Noureen, N.; Bardawil, C. E.; Zhao, X.; Cheema, M.; Tuli, S.; Shields, D.; Mats, K.; Al-Bataineh, O.; Golla, L.; Wang, A.; Pineda, R. H.; Koenigshoff, M.; Uttam, S.; Gau, D. M.; Soloff, A. C.

Abstract

Since the 1950s, micro- and nanoplastics (MNPs) have become omnipresent, representing a novel environmental hazard which continually deposits in our airways. Pulmonary macrophages (pMacs) orchestrate the balance between inflammation and tolerance required for homeostasis of the lung and are among the first immune cells to encounter inhaled MNPs. Yet, how pMacs react to plastic deposition in the lung and implications for disease remain unknown. Here, we exposed mice in vivo, human precision-cut lung slices (hPCLS) ex vivo, and monocyte-derived macrophages and cell lines to polystyrene MNPs in vitro. MNP deposition in the lung and extrapulmonary tissues was determined over a 1-week period and pMacs from MNP-laden lungs isolated for RNA-sequencing. We compared the effects of MNPs or diesel exhaust particulate exposures on hPCLS viability and metabolism, monocyte-derived macrophage transcription, and macrophage mitochondrial function, inflammation, and antigen presentation. MNPs readily translocated the lung and were observed in all organs examined within 1-day. pMacs from MNP-exposed mice expressed transcriptional pathways associated with endocrine system disorders, tissue remodeling, and malignant disease. Macrophage phagocytosis was impaired through decreased mitochondrial function which could be rescued pharmacologically. MNPs inhibited the ability of macrophages to effectively present OVA-antigen preventing TCR-specific activation, an effect that could be restored by blocking PD-1/PD-L1. These findings indicate that MNPs impair macrophages via unique mechanisms linking phagocytic and bioenergetic dysfunction. Loss of antigen-presenting capabilities in MNP-laden macrophages may compromise immunosurveillance. As such, MNPs have the potential to increase susceptibility to lung disease independent of the conventional mechanisms of inflammation and oxidative stress.

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