New insight into air pollution-related cardiovascular disease: an adverse outcome pathway framework of PM2.5-associated vascular calcification

Author:

Ding Ruiyang12,Huang Linyuan12,Yan Kanglin12,Sun Zhiwei12,Duan Junchao12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Toxicology and Sanitary Chemistry, School of Public Health, Capital Medical University , No. 10 Xitoutiao, You'anmen Wai, Fengtai District, Beijing 100069 , PR China

2. Beijing Key Laboratory of Environmental Toxicology, Capital Medical University , No. 10 Xitoutiao, You'anmen Wai, Fengtai District, Beijing 100069 , PR China

Abstract

Abstract Despite the air quality has been generally improved in recent years, ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5), a major contributor to air pollution, remains one of the major threats to public health. Vascular calcification is a systematic pathology associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Although the epidemiological evidence has uncovered the association between PM2.5 exposure and vascular calcification, little is known about the underlying mechanisms. The adverse outcome pathway (AOP) concept offers a comprehensive interpretation of all of the findings obtained by toxicological and epidemiological studies. In this review, reactive oxygen species generation was identified as the molecular initiating event (MIE), which targeted subsequent key events (KEs) such as oxidative stress, inflammation, endoplasmic reticulum stress, and autophagy, from the cellular to the tissue/organ level. These KEs eventually led to the adverse outcome, namely increased incidence of vascular calcification and atherosclerosis morbidity. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first AOP framework devoted to PM2.5-associated vascular calcification, which benefits future investigations by identifying current limitations and latent biomarkers.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Beijing Natural Science Foundation Program

Scientific Research Key Program of Beijing Municipal Commission of Education

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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