Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8552454 | Reproductive Toxicology | 2017 | 41 Pages |
Abstract
Long-term exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) may cause adverse pregnancy outcomes but the mechanisms are not clear. Our research confirms that PM2.5 induced DNA damage, and inhibited cell proliferation in HTR-8/SVneo cells, presenting in a dose- and time-dependent manners. Using quantitative proteomics, the 182 and 486 differentially expressed proteins in cells treated with 120 μg mlâ1 PM2.5 for 24 and 48 h were involved in many critical biological processes, including of cell proliferation, response to DNA damage, regulation of small GTPase mediated signal transduction, and etc. Further validation indicated that PM2.5 blocked the cell cycle at the G2/M phase through activation of the ATR-Cyclin E1/Cdk6 pathway, and it reduced the migration and invasion by upregulating TIMP1 and TIMP2 expression and downregulating Collagen I expression. Our findings were consistent with the observed effects of PM2.5 on cell cycle arrest and inhibition of migration and invasion in human extravillous trophoblast.
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Authors
Zhe Qin, Haiyan Hou, Feng Fu, Jun Wu, Bin Han, Wen Yang, Liwen Zhang, Jin Cao, Xiaohan Jin, Shixiang Cheng, Zhen Yang, Min Zhang, Xiaoxia Lan, Ting Yao, Qulong Dong, Siyu Wu, Jingjing Zhang, Zhongwei Xu, Yaqiong Chen,