Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) is a significant public health burden. Emerging evidence links volatile organic compounds (VOCs), such as benzene to endocrine disruption and metabolic dysfunction. However, the effects of chronic environmentally relevant VOC exposures on metabolic health are still emerging. Building on our previous findings that benzene exposure at smoking levels (50 ppm) induces metabolic impairments in male mice, we investigated the effects of benzene exposure below OSHA's Occupational Exposure Limit (OEL) on metabolic health. Adult male C57BL/6 mice were exposed to 0.9 ppm benzene 8 h a day for 9 weeks. We assessed measures of metabolic homeostasis and conducted RNA and proteome sequencing on insulin-sensitive organs (liver, skeletal muscle, adipose tissue). At this dose, exposure caused significant metabolic disruptions, including hyperglycemia, hyperinsulinemia, and insulin resistance. Transcriptomic analysis of liver, muscle, and adipose tissue identified key changes in metabolic and immune pathways especially in liver. Proteomic analysis of the liver revealed mitochondrial dysfunction as a shared feature, with disruptions in oxidative phosphorylation, mitophagy, and immune activation. Comparative analysis with high-dose (50 ppm) exposure showed conserved and dose-specific transcriptomic changes in liver, particularly in metabolic and immune responses. Our study is the first to comprehensively assess the impacts of occupational benzene exposure on metabolic health, highlighting mitochondrial dysfunction as a central mechanism and the dose-dependent molecular pathways in insulin-sensitive organs driving benzene-induced metabolic imbalance. Our data indicate that the current OSHA OEL for benzene is insufficient and needs to be lowered, as they could result in adverse metabolic health in exposed workers, particularly men, following chronic exposure.
Keywords: Air pollution; Benzene; Diabetes; Metabolism; Occupational exposure; VOCs.
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