Kurlawala Zimple, Singh Parul, Hill Bradford G, Haberzettl Petra
Center for Cardiometabolic Science, Christina Lee Brown Envirome Institute, Division of Environmental Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY, USA.
Toxicol Sci. 2023 Mar 1;192(2):209-22. doi: 10.1093/toxsci/kfad020.
Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) air pollution exposure increases the cardiovascular disease risk. Although the specific mechanisms remain elusive, it is thought that PM2.5-induced oxidative stress and endothelial dysfunction contribute to this pathogenesis. Our previous findings indicate that PM2.5 impairs vascular health via a circulating factor and that plasma lipid changes contribute to the observed vascular effects. In the current study, we extend on these findings by further characterizing PM2.5-induced changes in circulating lipids and examining whether the observed changes were accompanied by related alterations in the liver transcriptome. To address the role of pulmonary oxidative stress, we exposed wild-type (WT) mice and mice that overexpress extracellular superoxide dismutase (ecSOD-Tg) in the lungs to concentrated ambient PM2.5 (CAP, 9 days). We found that CAP decreased circulating complex lipids and increased free fatty acids and acylcarnitines in WT, but not ecSOD-Tg mice. These plasma lipid changes were accompanied by transcriptional changes in genes that regulate lipid metabolism (e.g., upregulation of lipid biosynthesis, downregulation of mitochondrial/peroxisomal FA metabolism) in the liver. The CAP-induced changes in lipid homeostasis and liver transcriptome were accompanied by pulmonary but not hepatic oxidative stress and were largely absent in ecSOD-Tg mice. Our results suggest that PM2.5 impacts hepatic lipid metabolism; however, it remains unclear whether the transcriptional changes in the liver contribute to PM2.5-induced changes in plasma lipids. Regardless, PM2.5-induced changes in the plasma lipidome and hepatic transcriptome are, at least in part, mediated by pulmonary oxidative stress.
暴露于细颗粒物(PM2.5)空气污染会增加心血管疾病风险。尽管具体机制尚不清楚,但人们认为PM2.5诱导的氧化应激和内皮功能障碍促成了这一发病过程。我们之前的研究结果表明,PM2.5通过一种循环因子损害血管健康,并且血浆脂质变化导致了所观察到的血管效应。在本研究中,我们通过进一步描述PM2.5诱导的循环脂质变化并检查所观察到的变化是否伴随着肝脏转录组的相关改变来扩展这些发现。为了探讨肺部氧化应激的作用,我们将野生型(WT)小鼠和肺部过表达细胞外超氧化物歧化酶(ecSOD-Tg)的小鼠暴露于浓缩环境PM2.5(CAP,9天)。我们发现,CAP降低了WT小鼠的循环复合脂质水平,并增加了其游离脂肪酸和酰基肉碱水平,但在ecSOD-Tg小鼠中未出现这种情况。这些血浆脂质变化伴随着肝脏中调节脂质代谢的基因的转录变化(例如,脂质生物合成上调,线粒体/过氧化物酶体脂肪酸代谢下调)。CAP诱导的脂质稳态和肝脏转录组变化伴随着肺部而非肝脏的氧化应激,并且在ecSOD-Tg小鼠中基本不存在。我们的结果表明,PM2.5会影响肝脏脂质代谢;然而,尚不清楚肝脏中的转录变化是否导致了PM2.5诱导的血浆脂质变化。无论如何,PM2.5诱导的血浆脂质组和肝脏转录组变化至少部分是由肺部氧化应激介导的。