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Chlorella alleviates the intestinal damage of tilapia caused by microplastics

Chemosphere 2024 12 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.
Yao Zheng, Yao Zheng, Yao Zheng, Yao Zheng, Yao Zheng, Yao Zheng, Yao Zheng, Yao Zheng, Lu Xiaoxian, Jiawen Hu, Haojun Zhu, Lu Xiaoxian, Jiawen Hu, Haojun Zhu, Jiawen Hu, Haojun Zhu, Gangchun Xu Jiawen Hu, Jiawen Hu, Jiawen Hu, Haojun Zhu, Jiawen Hu, Yi Sun, Gangchun Xu Gangchun Xu Gangchun Xu Gangchun Xu Yi Sun, Jiawen Hu, Haojun Zhu, Haojun Zhu, Jiawen Hu, Jiawen Hu, Jiawen Hu, Haojun Zhu, Yi Sun, Jiawen Hu, Haojun Zhu, Yi Sun, Gangchun Xu Gangchun Xu Gangchun Xu Yao Zheng, Yi Sun, Yi Sun, Yi Sun, Haojun Zhu, Haojun Zhu, Haojun Zhu, Haojun Zhu, Haojun Zhu, Gangchun Xu Gangchun Xu Gangchun Xu Gangchun Xu

Summary

Researchers investigated how polyethylene microplastics of different sizes affect the intestinal health of tilapia and whether Chlorella algae supplementation could alleviate the damage. They found that microplastics caused intestinal histological changes and disrupted enzyme activities, gene expression, and gut microbiota in the fish. The addition of Chlorella showed potential to mitigate some of the intestinal damage caused by nanoscale microplastic exposure.

Polymers
Body Systems

Polyethylene microplastics (MPs) of the different sizes may result in different response in fish. Studies showed microorganisms adhered to the surface of MPs have toxicological effect. Juveniles tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus, n = 600, 26.5 ± 0.6 g) were dispersed into six groups: the control group (A), 75 nm MP exposed group (B), 7.5 μm group (C) and 750 (D) μm group, 75 nm + 7.5 μm+750 μm group (E) and 75 nm + Chlorella vulgaris group (F), and exposed for 10 and 14 days. The intestinal histopathological change, enzymic activities, and the integrated "omics" workflows containing transcriptomics, proteomics, microbiota and metabolomes, have been performed in tilapia. Results showed that MPs were distributed on the surface of goblet cells, Chlorella group had severe villi fusion without something like intestinal damage, as in other MPs groups. The intestinal Total Cholesterol (TC, together with group E) and Tumor Necrosis Factor α (TNFα, except for group B) contents in group F were significantly increased, cytochrome p450 1a1 (EROD, group B and E) significantly increased, adenosine triphosphate (ATP), lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and caspase 3 (except group B) also significantly increased at 14 d. At 14 days, group E saw considerably higher regulation of the actin cytoskeleton, focal adhesion, insulin signaling pathway, and AGE-RAGE signaling pathway in diabetes complications. Whereas, chlorella enhanced the focal adhesion, cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction, and MAPK signaling pathways. PPAR signaling pathway has been extremely significantly enriched via the proteomics method. Candidatus latescibacteria, C. uhrbacteria, C. abyssubacteria, C. cryosericota significantly decreased caused by MPs of different particle sizes. Carboxylic acids and derivatives, indoles and derivatives, organooxygen compounds, fatty acyls and organooxygen compounds significantly increased with long-term duration, especially PPAR signaling pathway. MPs had a size-dependent long-term effect on histopathological change, gene and protein expression, and gut microbial metabolites, while chlorella alleviates the intestinal histopathological damage via the integrated "omics" workflows.

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