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Aggravated Visual Toxicity of Eco-Corona on Micro(Nano)Plastics in Marine Medaka (Oryzias melastigma)

Environmental Science & Technology Letters 2025 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Yuqing Ma, Yuqing Ma, Ling Liu, Yanan Xu, Jingyi Feng, Cunlong Wang, Cunlong Wang, Bin Liu, Peiran Lin, Haiyang Yin, Haiyang Yin, Le Sun, Ping Li, Zhi‐Hua Li

Summary

Researchers studied how a natural coating of biomolecules, called an eco-corona, that forms on micro and nanoplastics in seawater affects their toxicity to the eyes of marine medaka fish. They found that the eco-corona actually worsened visual damage compared to bare plastic particles, causing more severe retinal injury and eye cell death. The study reveals that the real-world biological coating on ocean plastics can amplify rather than reduce their harmful effects on marine life.

Polymers

In marine environments, micro(nano)plastics (MNPs) and biomolecules will inevitably combine to form eco-corona. However, the presence of eco-corona may change MNP physicochemical properties, thereby impacting their biological effects. This study investigated how eco-corona influenced the visual toxicity and potential mechanisms of MNPs in marine medaka. The results showed that MNPs, with or without eco-corona, can cause eye malformation, retinal damage, eye cell apoptosis, and suppression of visual-related gene expression. Although MNPs caused visual impairments, they did not lead to abnormal behavior during light-dark alternation. Moreover, while 5 μm polystyrene microplastics (MP5) caused eye swelling, 50 nm polystyrene microplastics (NP50) resulted in more severe retinal damage. Regardless of eco-corona, NP50 induced greater activity during dark periods compared with MP5. Notably, eco-corona exacerbated retinal damage and cell apoptosis caused by MNPs, leading to increased activity. The analysis of visual-related genes revealed that eco-corona aggravated the visual toxicity of MNPs, and NP50 exhibited greater visual toxicity than MP5, regardless of eco-corona. Overall, smaller MNPs may pose higher risks to the visual system in real marine environments. This study provides novel insights into the effects of eco-corona in MNP-induced visual toxicity and highlights the importance of considering biomolecules in marine environments.

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