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Alteration of shoaling behavior and dysbiosis in the gut of medaka (Oryzias latipes) exposed to 2-μm polystyrene microplastics

Chemosphere 2024 20 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yuki Takai, Xuchun Qiu, Yuji Oshima, Hiroshi Ohno, Yohei Simasaki, Hirokuni Miyamoto, Wataru Suda, Yui Tamura, Lee SeokHyun, Yangqing Liu, lk Joon Kang, Chie Shindo

Summary

Scientists exposed small freshwater fish (medaka) to fine polystyrene microplastics and found that the fish stopped schooling together -- a key social behavior -- during the exposure period, though the behavior recovered after exposure ended. The microplastics also disrupted the fish's gut bacteria, reducing beneficial species that produce short-chain fatty acids known to influence brain function through the gut-brain connection. This suggests microplastics may alter animal behavior by disrupting the gut microbiome.

Polymers
Body Systems

There is global concern that microplastics may harm aquatic life. Here, we examined the effects of fine polystyrene microplastics (PS-MPs, 2-μm diameter, 0.1 mg/L, 2.5 × 10 particles/L) on the behavior and the microbiome (linked to brain-gut interaction) of a fish model using medaka, Oryzias latipes. We found that shoaling behavior was reduced in PS-MP-exposed medaka compared with control fish during the exposure period, but it recovered during a depuration period. There was no difference in swimming speed between the PS-MP-exposed and control groups during the exposure period. Analysis of the dominant bacterial population (those comprising ≥1% of the total bacterial population) in the gut of fish showed that exposure to PS-MPs tended to increase the relative abundance of the phylum Fusobacteria and the genus Vibrio. Furthermore, structural-equation modeling of gut bacteria on the basis of machine-learning data estimated strong relationship involved in the reduction of the functional bacterial species of minority (<1% of the total bacterial population) such as the genera Muribaculum (an undefined role), Aquaspirillum (a candidate for nitrate metabolism and magnetotactics), and Clostridium and Phascolarctobacterium (potential producers of short-chain fatty acids, influencing behavior by affecting levels of neurotransmitters) as a group of gut bacteria in association with PS-MP exposure. Our results suggest that fish exposure to fine microplastics may cause dysbiosis and ultimately cause social behavior disorders linked to brain-gut interactions. This effect could be connected to reduction of fish fitness in the ecosystem and reduced fish survival.

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