Nanosized microplastics damage cell membranes by altering lateral and transverse distributions of cholesterol

13 May 2025, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Microplastics, tiny fragments resulting from the degradation of plastic waste, are abundant in water, air, and soil and are currently recognized as a global environmental problem. There is also growing evidence that nanosized microplastics can be hazardous to living species. Unlike most experimental methods, computer modeling is particularly well suited to studying the effects of such nanosized microplastics. Here we use atomic-scale computer simulations to explore for the first time the impact of polymer nanoparticles on model cell membranes containing cholesterol, an essential component of membranes of eukaryotic cells. Our findings clearly show that, once a polymer nanoparticle (~4.0 – 4.5 nm in diameter) partitions into the membrane interior, it alters both the lateral and transverse distributions of cholesterol. Polymer chains induce the formation of domains depleted in cholesterol and also promote cholesterol flip-flops. These changes could have severe consequences for living cells as they affect the fluidity and the phase behavior of membranes, the transmembrane lipid distribution, and the ability of membranes to balance the stress.

Keywords

microplastics
polymer nanoparticle
biological membranes
cholesterol
computer modeling

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Supporting information
Description
Detailed description of the models and methods, additional results for binding of microplastics to the lipid membrane, and for the membranes with pre-inserted polymer nanoplastics.
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