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. Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Sign in to save

Using eRNA/eDNA metabarcoding to detect community-level impacts of nanoplastic exposure to benthic estuarine ecosystems

Environmental Pollution 2023 11 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.
Marissa Giroux, Jay R. Reichman, Troy Langknecht, Robert M. Burgess, Kay T. Ho

Summary

Researchers used environmental DNA and RNA metabarcoding to detect community-level impacts of nanoplastic exposure on benthic estuarine organisms in marine sediments. The study suggests that molecular methods offer a powerful approach for assessing how nanoplastic contamination affects the diversity and composition of ecologically important microscopic organisms in marine food webs.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Plastic particles are ubiquitous in marine systems and fragment into smaller pieces, such as nanoplastics (NPs). The effects of NPs on marine organisms are of growing concern but are not well understood. Marine sediments act as a sink for many contaminants, like microplastics, and are rich habitats for benthic micro- and meiofauna which are ecologically-important components of marine food webs; however, little is known about the sensitivities of specific organisms to NPs or the effects on community diversity and composition. Utilizing molecular methods, such as metabarcoding of environmental DNA/RNA, allows for the rapid and comprehensive detection of microscopic organisms via high-throughput sequencing to assess adverse effects at the community level. The objective of this study was to use a metabarcoding approach to investigate the effects of NPs on benthic micro- and meiofaunal community diversity. Mesocosms were created with sediment cores collected from the Narrow River estuary (Rhode Island, USA) and exposed to 900 nm diameter weathered polystyrene beads at concentrations of 0.1, 1, 10, or 100 mg/kg dry weight in sediment for two weeks. Following exposure, RNA and DNA were co-extracted from the sediment, RNA was reverse-transcribed, 18S and COI markers were PCR-amplified, and amplicons were sequenced on an Illumina MiSeq. Using the 18S marker and eRNA template, increases to α-diversity and significant differences to β-diversity were observed in the highest NP exposures relative to the control. Observed differences in community composition were driven by the differential abundance of several types of protists and arthropods. Significant dose-dependent shifts in composition were observed in β-diversity Jaccard and Unweighted-Unifrac metrics with the 18S marker using the RNA template. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of a dose-response relationship for NPs at a community level, and it highlights the value of using community-level endpoints to assess environmental impacts of nanoparticles.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Exploitation of environmental DNA (eDNA) for ecotoxicological research: A critical review on eDNA metabarcoding in assessing marine pollution

This review examines how environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis -- a method that detects organisms through DNA traces left in water -- can be used to monitor the effects of marine pollution, including plastic waste. While eDNA does not detect plastics directly, it reveals how pollution changes the biodiversity of marine communities, serving as an early warning system. The approach could help scientists better track the ecological damage caused by microplastic contamination in oceans.

Article Tier 2

Size-dependent impacts from polystyrene micro- and nanoplastics on freshwater invertebrates: A mesocosm study combining environmental DNA metabarcoding and morphological identification

A 14-week outdoor mesocosm experiment exposed natural freshwater invertebrate communities to 15 µm and 150 nm polystyrene particles, finding size-dependent effects on community composition with nanoplastics causing greater disruption than microplastics at environmentally relevant concentrations.

Article Tier 2

Multi-omics-based approach reveals the effects of microplastics on microbial abundance and function of sediments in Shenzhen coastal waters

Researchers used a multi-omics approach combining metagenomics and metatranscriptomics to investigate how microplastic contamination affects microbial community abundance and functional gene expression in coastal sediments from eastern and western Shenzhen, China. They found microplastic concentrations of 119 items per kilogram in eastern sediments and 664 items per kilogram in western sediments, with higher contamination sites showing significant shifts in microbial community composition and altered expression of genes involved in carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur cycling.

Article Tier 2

Unveiling microplastic's role in nitrogen cycling: Metagenomic insights from estuarine sediment microcosms

Researchers used metagenomic analysis to examine how polyethylene and polystyrene microplastics affect nitrogen cycling in estuarine sediments. They found that microplastics altered the abundance of genes involved in key nitrogen transformation processes like nitrification and denitrification. The study reveals that microplastic pollution in estuaries may disrupt important biogeochemical cycles that support aquatic ecosystem health.

Article Tier 2

Where Have You Been? Backtracking Microplastic to Its Source Using the Biomolecular Composition of the Ecocorona

Researchers used metaproteomic and eDNA metabarcoding analysis of the biological ecocorona coating microplastics to trace plastic particles back to their source environment. Pristine and pre-incubated plastic fibers and fragments deployed in different environments accumulated distinct biomolecular signatures, enabling environmental source tracking of microplastics.

Share this paper