Polystyrene nanoplastics exacerbate dibutyl phthalate-induced liver fibrosis through PDGFRα-dependent hepatic stellate cell activation
- Authors
- Baek, Eun Bok; Ko, Jae-Hong; Yamamura, Hisao; Yamamura, Aya; Lee, Hyang-Ae; Kim, Eun-Jin; Prayoga, Anjas Happy; Nashar, Ahmad Awwalun; Lee, Jae-Ho; Jung, Sung-Cherl; Zhou, Tong; Kang, Dawon; Ko, Eun-A
- Issue Date
- Apr-2026
- Publisher
- Elsevier Ltd
- Keywords
- Dibutyl phthalate; Fibrosis; Hepatic stellate cell; Nanoplastic; PDGFRα
- Citation
- Environmental Pollution, v.395
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Environmental Pollution
- Volume
- 395
- URI
- https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/82456
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.envpol.2026.127763
- ISSN
- 0269-7491
1873-6424
- Abstract
- Nanoplastic particles (NPs) derived from common polymers such as polyvinyl chloride and polystyrene (PS) act as persistent environmental reservoirs that facilitate the transport and cellular internalization of dibutyl phthalate (DBP), a ubiquitous plasticizer contaminating air, water, soil, and food through plastic leaching. The platelet-derived growth factor receptor α (PDGFRα) pathway is a well-established regulator of hepatic stellate cell (HSC) activation and fibrogenesis; however, its mechanistic involvement in plastic particle–induced hepatotoxicity and its intersection with DBP-mediated fibrosis remain unclear. Using HSC-hepatic cell cocultures (LX-2-HepG2 or LO2) and transcriptomic profiling, we demonstrate that DBP exposure markedly decreases hepatic cellular viability, elevates proinflammatory cytokines (TNF and IL-6), and induces apoptosis. In parallel, DBP stimulates LX-2 proliferation and upregulates fibrogenic markers (TGFB1, COL1A1, ACTA2) along with enhanced secretion of PDGF-A and PDGF-B, thereby reinforcing hepatic cell injury through paracrine signaling. RNA-seq analysis revealed activation of apoptotic and TNF-related pathways in LO2, whereas LX-2 cells exhibited upregulation of oncogenic and PI3K–Akt signaling, collectively promoting a profibrotic transcriptional landscape. In vivo, both PDGFRα antibody neutralization and pharmacological inhibition with imatinib significantly attenuated DBP-induced hepatic fibrosis and inflammatory gene expression, confirming PDGFRα′s central role in DBP toxicity. Polystyrene nanoplastics (PS-NPs) were rapidly internalized by PDGFRα-positive primary HSCs within 24 h, leading to increased PDGFRα and PI3K expression. Co-exposure to PS-NPs and DBP resulted in synergistic hepatotoxicity and exacerbated fibrotic injury, demonstrating compounding effects of mixed environmental pollutants. Collectively, these findings identify PDGFRα as a mechanistic nexus linking DBP and PS-NPs exposure to hepatic fibrosis and highlight its potential as a therapeutic target for environmentally induced liver disease. The results further underscore the importance of co-exposure paradigms in evaluating the health risks of complex contaminant mixtures.
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