4.7 Article

Small polystyrene microplastics interfere with the breakdown of milk proteins during static in vitro simulated human gastric digestion

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 335, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2023.122282

Keywords

Microplastics; Polystyrene; Pepsin; Enzyme activity; Simulated gastric digestion; Cow's milk

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In this study, the interaction between pepsin and polystyrene microplastics ( MPs) was evaluated. The surface chemistry of MPs was found to determine the binding affinity of pepsin. Prolonged exposure to MPs led to structural changes in pepsin and a significant reduction in its activity during gastric digestion.
Human ingestion of microplastics (MPs) is common and inevitable due to the widespread contamination of food items, but implications on the gastric digestion of food proteins are still unknown. In this study, the interactions between pepsin and polystyrene (PS) MPs were evaluated by investigating enzyme activity and conformation in a simulated human gastric environment in the presence or absence of PS MPs. The impact on food digestion was also assessed by monitoring the kinetics of protein hydrolysis through static in vitro gastric digestion of cow's milk contaminated with PS. The binding of pepsin to PS showed that the surface chemistry of MPs dictates binding affinity. The key contributor to pepsin adsorption seems to be 7C-7C interactions between the aromatic residues and the PS phenyl rings. During quick exposure (10 min) of pepsin to increasing concentrations (222, 2219, 22188 particles/mL) of 10 & mu;m PS (PS10) and 100 & mu;m PS (PS100), total enzymatic activities were not affected remarkably. However, upon prolonged exposure at 1 and 2 h, preferential binding of pepsin to the small, low zeta-potential PS caused structural changes in the protein which led to a significant reduction of its activity. Digestion of cow's milk mixed with PS10 resulted in transient accumulation of larger peptides (10-35 kDa) and reduced bioavailability of short peptides (2-9 kDa) in the gastric phase. This, however, was only observed at extremely high PS10 concentration (0.3 mg/mL or 5.46E+05 particles/mL). The digestion of milk peptides, bound preferentially over pepsin within the hard corona on the PS10 surface, was delayed up to 15 min in comparison to bulk protein digestion. Intact caseins, otherwise rapidly digested, remained bound to PS10 in the hard corona for up to 15 min. This work presents valuable insights regarding the interaction of MPs, food proteins, and pepsin, and their dynamics during gastric digestion.

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