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Negligible additive effect of environmental concentrations of fragmented polyethylene terephthalate microplastics on the growth and reproductive performance of Java medaka exposed to 17β-estradiol and bisphenol A

Aquatic Toxicology 2024 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Md. Niamul Haque, Somyeong Lee, Sang-Eun Nam, Somyeong Lee, Jae‐Sung Rhee Md. Niamul Haque, Md. Niamul Haque, Md. Niamul Haque, Md. Niamul Haque, Sang-Eun Nam, Md. Niamul Haque, Jae‐Sung Rhee Jae‐Sung Rhee Somyeong Lee, Somyeong Lee, Somyeong Lee, Chae Hwa Kim, Chae Hwa Kim, Jae‐Sung Rhee Jae‐Sung Rhee Jae‐Sung Rhee Chae Hwa Kim, Chae Hwa Kim, Chae Hwa Kim, Chae Hwa Kim, Chae Hwa Kim, Chae Hwa Kim, Jae‐Sung Rhee Jae‐Sung Rhee Jae‐Sung Rhee T. Kim, Md. Niamul Haque, Md. Niamul Haque, Jae‐Sung Rhee Jae‐Sung Rhee Chae Hwa Kim, Md. Niamul Haque, Chae Hwa Kim, Jae‐Sung Rhee

Summary

Researchers exposed Java medaka fish to PET microplastics combined with endocrine-disrupting chemicals over 200 days. The study found that at environmentally relevant concentrations, fragmented PET microplastics showed negligible additional effects beyond those caused by the chemicals alone, suggesting that the direct endocrine-disrupting impact of PET microplastics at low concentrations may be limited.

To investigate whether environmental concentrations of fragmented polyethylene terephthalate (PET) microplastics (MPs) have additional or combined effects on endocrine-disrupting activity, Java medaka (Oryzias javanicus) were exposed to 17β-estradiol (E2; 5, 10, 50, and 100 ng L), bisphenol A (BPA; 5, 10, 50, and 100 µg L), and E2 and BPA combined with PET MPs (1 and 100 particles L) for 200 days. The growth parameters, such as body length and weight, were significantly decreased by the highest concentrations of E2 and BPA. A significant reduction in egg production was observed in female fish exposed to BPA, with an additive toxic effect of PET MPs. A female-biased sex ratio was observed in fish exposed to both chemicals. Exposure to E2 significantly increased the hepatosomatic index (HSI) in both sexes, while no significant effect was observed in the gonadosomatic index (GSI). Exposure to BPA significantly increased the HSI in female fish and decreased the GSI in both sexes of fish. An additive effect of PET MPs was observed on the GSI value of female exposed to BPA. Significant elevations in vitellogenin (VTG) levels were observed in both sexes due to exposure to E2 and BPA. Additive effects of PET MPs were observed on VTG levels in males exposed to E2 and BPA. Taken together, even long-term treatment with PET MPs induced only a negligible additive effect on the endocrine-disrupting activity in Java medaka at environmentally relevant concentrations.

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