0
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. Gut & Microbiome Human Health Effects Sign in to save

The effect and mechanism of variable particle size microplastics and levofloxacin on the neurotoxicity of Rana nigromaculata based on the microorganism-intestine-brain axis

Journal of Environmental Management 2024 9 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.
Wenjing Zhang, Wenjun Zhang, Wenjing Zhang, Miaomiao Teng, Jiashu Xu, Jiali Wang, Yuxi Liu, Jiahang Yang, Yuxi Liu

Summary

Researchers exposed frog tadpoles to microplastics of different sizes combined with an antibiotic and found that the combination caused nervous system damage through the gut-brain connection. The particle size of the microplastics influenced the severity of the neurotoxic effects, with certain sizes causing more behavioral changes than others. The study suggests that microplastics and antibiotics together in waterways may pose greater ecological risks than either pollutant alone.

Body Systems

Microplastics (MPs) usually appear in the aquatic environment as complex pollutants in combination with other environmental pollutants, such as levofloxacin (LVFX). After a 45-day exposure to LVFX and MPs with different particle sizes at environmental levels, LVFX was neurotoxic to Rana nigromaculata tadpoles. The order of the effects of the exposure treatment on tadpole behavior was: LVFX-MP3>LVFX-MP1>LVFX-MP2 ≥ LVFX. Results of transcriptome analysis of tadpole brain tissue showed that LVFX in combination with 0.10 and 10.00 μm MP interferes with the nervous system through the cell adhesion molecules pathway. Interestingly, the order of effects of the co-exposure on oxidative stress in the intestine was inconsistent with that of tadpole behavior. We found that Paraacteroides might be a microplastic indicator species for the gut microbiota of aquatic organisms. The results of the targeted metabolism of neurotransmitters in the intestine suggest that in the LVFX-MP2 treatment, LVFX alleviated the intestinal microbiota disorder caused by 1.00 μm MP, by regulating intestinal microbiota participating in the TCA cycle VI and gluconeogenesis and tetrapyrrole biosynthesis I, while downregulating Met and Orn, and upregulating 5HIAA, thereby easing the neurotoxicity to tadpoles exposed to LVFX-MP2. This work is of great significance for the comprehensive assessment of the aquatic ecological risks of microplastics-antibiotic compound pollutants.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Combined effect and mechanism of microplastic with different particle sizes and levofloxacin on developing Rana nigromaculata: Insights from thyroid axis regulation and immune system

Researchers exposed developing frogs to a combination of microplastics of different sizes and the antibiotic levofloxacin at environmentally relevant levels. They found that the combination disrupted thyroid hormone regulation and immune system function more severely than either pollutant alone. The study suggests that microplastics and pharmaceutical contaminants together may pose compounding risks to amphibian development and health.

Article Tier 2

Unraveling the mechanism of brain damage in Carassius auratus by polypropylene microplastics and oxytetracycline via the brain-gut-microbiota axis

Researchers investigated how polypropylene microplastics and the antibiotic oxytetracycline together affect the brain-gut-microbiota axis of goldfish at environmentally realistic levels. They found that microplastics acted as carriers for the antibiotic, leading to significantly higher accumulation in the brain and intestine, worsening inflammation and suppressing key neurotransmitter enzymes. The study suggests that co-exposure to microplastics and antibiotics can trigger nervous system disruption through the gut-brain connection.

Article Tier 2

Combined effects of polystyrene micro-/nano-plastics and imidacloprid on Gut–Brain axis and neurotoxicity in juvenile Carassius auratus

Researchers exposed juvenile crucian carp to polystyrene micro- and nanoplastics combined with the pesticide imidacloprid and found distinct size-dependent toxicity patterns. Nanoplastics primarily targeted the brain, causing blood-brain barrier breakdown and neurotoxic effects linked to behavioral changes, while microplastics caused more severe intestinal damage, with gut microbiome analysis implicating the microbiota-gut-brain axis as a pathway for systemic toxicity.

Article Tier 2

Micro/nano-plastics cause neurobehavioral toxicity in discus fish (Symphysodon aequifasciatus): Insight from brain-gut-microbiota axis

Researchers exposed juvenile discus fish to microfibers and nanoplastics and found that both types caused neurobehavioral problems, but through different mechanisms involving the brain-gut-microbiota axis. Nanoplastics weakened swimming and predatory abilities, while microfibers reduced growth, and both disrupted gut microbial communities that influence brain function. The study provides the first evidence linking microplastic-induced gut microbiome changes to neurological effects in fish through the gut-brain connection.

Article Tier 2

Aged microplastics change the toxicological mechanism of roxithromycin on Carassius auratus: Size-dependent interaction and potential long-term effects

Researchers studied how different sizes of aged microplastics (0.5, 5, and 50 micrometers) affect the toxicity of the antibiotic roxithromycin in goldfish. The study found that microplastics promoted antibiotic accumulation in tissues in a size-dependent manner, with smaller particles worsening liver and brain damage while larger particles caused more intestinal damage, and also altered gut microbiota composition.

Share this paper