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Uncovering the toxic effects and adaptive mechanisms of aminated polystyrene nanoplastics on microbes in sludge anaerobic digestion system: Insight from extracellular to intracellular

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2024 23 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Weixin Zhao, Hao Ma, Zhelu Gao, Dan Li, Lin Ying-zi, Chuandong Wu, Liangliang Wei

Summary

Researchers investigated how nanoplastics with amino functional groups affect the anaerobic digestion process used to treat sewage sludge. They found that these surface-modified nanoplastics reduced methane production and disrupted the microbial communities responsible for breaking down waste. The study reveals that chemically modified nanoplastics may be more disruptive to wastewater treatment processes than unmodified particles.

Polymers

The impacts of polystyrene nanoplastics (PS NPs) with amino functional groups on sludge anaerobic digestion process and the underlying microbial feedbacks remains unclear. Herein, PS NPs coated with and without amino functional groups were employed to explore their impacts on the sludge digestion performance. Experimental results showed that aminated PS NPs (PS-NH) deteriorated the methane yield and hydrolysis rate. The Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek theory analysis suggested that the PS-NH decreased the interaction energy barrier, making it easier to contact with sludge and disrupting the structure of extracellular polymeric substances. Metagenomic analysis showed that the abundance of functional microbes (e.g., Longilinea, Leptolinea, and Methanosarcina) decreased, accompanied with lower network complexity and fewer keystone taxa. Molecular docking revealed that PS-NH occupy the antioxidant enzyme active binding sites through hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interactions, impairing degradation of reactive oxygen species. The severe intracellular oxidative stress up-regulated genes associated with quorum sensing (e.g., luxI and luxR) and protein biosynthesis (e.g., algA, trpG and trpE), and further inducing compact tryptophan-like proteins as a defense against NPs. These findings provide new understanding of the toxic effects from PS-NH in biological systems and offer valuable insights into the regulation strategies aimed at alleviating NPs inhibition.

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