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Polystyrene microplastics facilitate the chemical journey of phthalates through vegetable and aggravate phytotoxicity
Summary
This study showed that polystyrene microplastics in soil can absorb and carry phthalates (harmful chemicals used in plastics) into vegetable crops, increasing the amount of these toxic chemicals in the edible parts of the plants. The combination of microplastics and phthalates together was more damaging to plant health than either pollutant alone. This is concerning for human health because it means microplastics could be increasing our exposure to toxic chemicals through the vegetables we eat.
Polystyrene microplastics (PS) and dibutyl phthalate (DBP) are emerging pollutants widely coexisting in agroecosystems. However, the efficacies of PS as carriers for DBP and their interactive mechanisms on crop safety remain scarce. Here, this study investigated the combined exposure effects and the interacting mechanisms of PS laden with DBP on choy sum (Brassica parachinensis L.). Results showed that PS could efficiently adsorb and carry DBP, with a maximum carrying capacity of 9.91 %, facilitating the chemical translocation of DBP in choy sum and exacerbating phytotoxicity. Due to the changes in the properties of PS, DBP loading aggravated the phytotoxicity of choy sum, exhibiting synergistically toxic effects compared with individual exposure. The Trojan-horse-complexes formed by PS+DBP severely delayed the seed germination process and altered spatial growth patterns, causing disruptions in oxidative stress, osmoregulation, photosynthetic function, and elemental reservoirs of choy sum. Combined pollutants enhanced the uptake and translocation of both PS and DBP by 8.90-31.94 % and 136.81-139.37 %, respectively; while the accumulation processes for PS were more complex than for DBP. Visualization indicated that PS was intensively sequestered in roots with a strong fluorescent signal after loading DBP. This study comprehensively investigated the efficacies of PS carrying DBP on phytotoxicity, bioavailability, and their interactive mechanisms, providing significant evidence for food safety assessment of emerging contaminant interactions.
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