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Gut toxicity of polystyrene microplastics and polychlorinated biphenyls to Eisenia fetida: Single and co-exposure effects with a focus on links between gut bacteria and bacterial translocation stemming from gut barrier damage

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 15 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.
Tongtong Li, Hao Chen Hao Chen Shijin Wu, Tongtong Li, Hao Chen Baohua Xu, Baohua Xu, Hao Chen Hao Chen Hao Chen Baohua Xu, Hao Chen Hao Chen Hao Chen Baohua Xu, Ying Shi, Jun Li, Hao Chen Tongtong Li, Tongtong Li, Ying Shi, Mengwei Yu, Mengwei Yu, Hao Chen Shaohui Xia, Hao Chen Hao Chen Mengwei Yu, Shaohui Xia, Mengwei Yu, Shijin Wu, Hao Chen Hao Chen Shijin Wu, Hao Chen

Summary

Researchers examined how polystyrene microplastics and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) affect the gut health of earthworms, both individually and in combination. They found that co-exposure caused more severe gut barrier damage and bacterial translocation than either pollutant alone, with significant disruption to the gut microbial community. The study highlights the importance of considering combined pollutant effects when assessing environmental risks to soil organisms.

Polymers
Body Systems

Microplastics' (MPs) ability to sorb and transport polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in soil ecosystems warrants significant attention. Although organisms mainly encounter pollutants through the gut, the combined pollution impact of MPs and PCBs on soil fauna gut toxicity remains incompletely understood. Consequently, this study examined the gut toxicity of polystyrene MPs (PS-MPs) and PCB126 on Eisenia fetida, emphasizing the links between gut bacteria and bacterial translocation instigated by gut barrier impairment. Our findings underscored that E. fetida could ingest PS-MPs, which mitigated the PCB126 accumulation in E. fetida by 9.43 %. Exposure to PCB126 inhibited the expression of gut tight junction (TJ) protein genes. Although the presence of PS-MPs attenuated this suppression, it didn't alleviate gut barrier damage and bacterial translocation in the co-exposure group. This group demonstrated a significantly increased level of gut bacterial load (BLT, ANOVA, p = 0.005 vs control group) and lipopolysaccharide-binding protein (LBP, ANOVA, all p < 0.001 vs control, PCB, and PS groups), both of which displayed significant positive correlations with antibacterial defense. Furthermore, exposure to PS-MPs and PCB126, particularly within the co-exposure group, results in a marked decline in the dispersal ability of gut bacteria. This leads to dysbiosis (Adonis, R = 0.294, p = 0.001), with remarkable signature taxa such as Janthinobacterium, Microbacterium and Pseudomonas, being implicated in gut barrier dysfunction. This research illuminates the mechanism of gut toxicity induced by PS-MPs and PCB126 combined pollution in earthworms, providing novel insights for the ecological risk assessment of soil.

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