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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Reproductive & Development Sign in to save

Nanoplastics enhanced the developmental toxicity of aromatic disinfection byproducts to a marine polychaete at non-feeding early life stage

Chemosphere 2024 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Kmy Leung Xinyi Chang, Xinyi Chang, Xinyi Chang, Xinyi Chang, Xinyi Chang, Jiarui Han, Yun Yang, Yun Yang, Xinyi Chang, Xiangru Zhang, Xiangru Zhang, Jiarui Han, Kmy Leung Kmy Leung Jiarui Han, Yuhe He, Kmy Leung Yuhe He, Wanxin Li, Kmy Leung Xinyi Chang, Xinyi Chang, Kmy Leung Yuhe He, Wanxin Li, Kmy Leung Kmy Leung Kmy Leung Yuhe He, Yuhe He, Kmy Leung Kmy Leung Kmy Leung Kmy Leung Kmy Leung Kmy Leung Yuhe He, Kmy Leung Kmy Leung Kmy Leung Xinyi Chang, Kmy Leung Kmy Leung Kmy Leung Kmy Leung Kmy Leung

Summary

Researchers discovered a previously overlooked way that nanoplastics can make chemical pollutants more toxic to marine life, even without being ingested. They found that tiny plastic particles clump onto the outer surface of marine worm embryos, concentrating harmful disinfection byproducts up to 1,200 times higher than surrounding water levels. The findings highlight that nanoplastics pose especially serious risks to vulnerable early life stages of ocean organisms.

Polymers

Micro/nanoplastics can act as vectors for organic pollutants and enhance their toxicity, which has been attributed to the ingestion by organisms and the "Trojan horse effect". In this study, we disclosed a non-ingestion pathway for the toxicity enhancement effect of nanoplastics. Initially, the combined toxicity of polystyrene microplastics (40 μm) or nanoplastics (50 nm) with three disinfection byproducts (DBPs) to a marine polychaete, Platynereis dumerilii, was investigated. No toxic effect was observed for the micro/nanoplastics alone. The microplastics showed no effect on the toxicity of the three DBPs, whereas the nanoplastics significantly enhanced the toxicity of two aromatic DBPs when the polychaete was in its non-feeding early life stage throughout the exposure period. The microplastics showed no interaction with the P. dumerilii embryos, whereas the nanoplastics agglomerated strongly on the embryonic chorion and fully encapsulated the embryos. This could contribute to higher actual exposure concentrations in the microenvironment around the embryos, as the concentrations of the two aromatic DBPs on the nanoplastics were 1200 and 120 times higher than those in bulk solution. Our findings highlight an important and previously overlooked mechanism by which nanoplastics and organic pollutants, such as DBPs, pose a higher risk to marine species at their vulnerable early life stages. This study may contribute to a broader understanding of the environmental impacts of plastic pollution and underscore the necessity to mitigate their risks associated with DBPs.

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