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Photosynthetic dysfunction and antioxidant defense disruption in rice seedlings induced by tire wear microplastics

Biologia Plantarum 2026

Summary

Researchers exposed rice seedlings to tire wear microplastics and found that while particles stimulated short-term growth, they significantly suppressed photosynthetic electron transport rates and inhibited key antioxidant enzymes — indicating that apparent growth benefits mask underlying physiological stress in agricultural settings.

Polymers

Background and aims: Tire wear microplastics (TWMs) are emerging environmental contaminants, but their ecological risks to agricultural systems remain poorly understood. Methods: Rice seedlings were exposed to 0, 10, 100, and 1 000 mg L-1 TWMs for 10 days. Growth parameters, chlorophyll fluorescence, and antioxidant enzyme activities were measured. Results: TWMs promoted growth; exposure to 1 000 mg L-1 TWMs increased plant height and root length by 8.06% and 57.38%, respectively. Chlorophyll fluorescence analysis revealed that TWMs significantly suppressed rETRmax by 32.53 - 43.62% and altered qP and NPQ. TWMs inhibited Y(NPQ) while enhancing Y(NO) loss, indicating impaired photoprotective dissipation and aggravated photodamage. TWMs also inhibited SOD, POD, CAT, and APX activities in both leaves and roots, with root CAT and APX decreasing by up to 37.35% and 40.34%, reflecting a direct impairment of the antioxidant defense system. Conclusions: Rice seedlings achieve TWM-induced short-term growth at the expense of compromised photosynthetic efficiency and antioxidant defense, leading to an unsustainable compensatory state. This study provides physiological evidence for assessing TWMs phytotoxicity in agricultural systems.

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