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Amino-modified polystyrene nanoplastics induced multiple response of Artemia hemocytes

Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part C Toxicology & Pharmacology 2024 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Hu Duan, Namin Pan, Namin Pan, Xuanxuan Shao, Xuehui Wang, Yingchao Ma, Jiayi Liu, Xuekai Han, Xuekai Han, Liying Sui

Summary

Researchers exposed the zooplankton Artemia to amino-modified polystyrene nanoplastics and observed multiple adverse responses in their blood cell system. The nanoplastics triggered changes across five hemocyte subpopulations, causing cell death, oxidative stress, and altered immune function at environmentally relevant concentrations. The study suggests that nanoplastic pollution may compromise the innate immune defenses of small aquatic organisms at the base of the food chain.

Polymers
Study Type In vivo

Polystyrene polymers cause severe toxicity to aquatic animals. However, the process and mechanisms of innate immunity of invertebrates living at the bottom of the food chain to these pollutants remain unclear. In this study, the blood system responses of zooplankton Artemia were assessed through in vivo and in vitro exposure to amino-modified polystyrene nanoplastics (PS-NH2 NPs). The results indicated that the LC50 values of PS-NH2 NPs were 1.09 μg·mL-1 over 48 h and 0.42 μg·mL-1 over 7 d. Based on the five hemocyte subpopulations identified in Artemia, in vitro exposure assays revealed that phagocytosis was performed by plasmocytes and granulocytes with phagocytic rate of 22.64 %. TEM analysis further showed that PS-NH2 NPs caused cytoplasm vacuolization, swollen mitochondria, and lipid processing disorder. Gene expression pattern results demonstrated that Spatzle, Tollip, Hsp70, Hsp90, Casp8, API5and Pxn were significantly upregulated upon acute and chronic exposure (p < 0.05), while chronic exposure could induce significantly upregulation of ProPO (p < 0.05). Moreover, PS-NH2 NPs exposure remarkably varied the hemolymph microbiota and hemogram, particularly by increasing the proportion of adipohemocytes and phagocytes (p < 0.05). Our findings suggest that PS-NH2 NPs induce different responses in Artemia hemocyte, as primarily reflected by phagocytic processes, expression of immune and apoptosis relating genes, cell fates, hemogram and hemolymph microbiota variations. These findings support the possibility of using Artemia hemocytes as bioindicator to estimate nanoplastics pollution, thus contributing to hematological toxicity research in response to nanoplastics.

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