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Physiological responses and molecular mechanism of Chlorella sorokiniana to surgical mask exudates in wastewater

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2023 18 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.
Di Zhou, Mengting Li, Di Zhou, Shuang Qiu, Mengting Li, Mengting Li, Wenju Shan, Wenju Shan, Zhipeng Chen, Zhengshuai Wu, Zhengshuai Wu, Shijian Ge

Summary

Researchers studied how chemical compounds leaching from surgical masks in wastewater affect the growth of the microalga Chlorella sorokiniana. They found that even at environmentally realistic concentrations, surgical mask exudates inhibited algal growth by disrupting photosynthesis and causing oxidative stress. The study highlights an overlooked consequence of pandemic-related plastic waste on wastewater treatment systems that rely on microalgae.

Study Type Environmental

Microalgae-based bioremediation is likely to be challenged by the microplastics (MPs) in wastewater induced by the widely use of surgical masks (SMs) during COVID-19. However, such toxic impact was generally evaluated under high exposure concentrations of MPs, which was not in agreement with the actual wastewater environments. Therefore, this study investigated the microalgal cellular responses to the surgical mask exudates (SMEs) in wastewater and explored the underlying inhibitory mechanism from the molecular perspective. Specifically, 390 items/L SMEs (including 200 items/L MPs which was the actual MP level in wastewater) significantly inhibited nutrient uptake and photosynthetic activities interrupted peroxisome biogenesis and induced oxidative stress which destroyed the structure of cell membrane. Moreover, the SMEs exposure also affected carbon fixation pathways, suppressed ABC transporters while promoted oxidative phosphorylation processes for the ATP accumulation These comprehensive processes led to an 8.5% reduced microalgae growth and variations of cellular biocomponents including lipid, carbohydrate, and protein. The increased carotenoids and consumed unsaturated fatty acid were considered to alleviate the SMEs-induced stress, and the enhanced EPS secretion facilitated the homogeneous aggregation. These findings will enhance current understandings of the SMEs effects in wastewater on microalgae and further improve the practical relevance of microalgae wastewater bioremediation technology.

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