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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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Gut & Microbiome Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Remediation Sign in to save

Differentially Charged Nanoplastics Induce Distinct Effects on the Growth and Gut of Benthic Insects (<i>Chironomus kiinensis</i>) via Charge-Specific Accumulation and Perturbation of the Gut Microbiota

Environmental Science & Technology 2023 41 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jie Zhang, Jie Zhang, Jie Zhang, Jie Zhang, Yao Li, Xinghui Xia, Jie Zhang, Jie Zhang, Jie Zhang, Jie Zhang, Jie Zhang, Chuanxin Ma Xinghui Xia, Xinghui Xia, Xinghui Xia, Yao Li, Xinghui Xia, Chuanxin Ma Chuanxin Ma Jie Zhang, Jie Zhang, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Xinghui Xia, Jie Zhang, Yao Li, Jie Zhang, Chuanxin Ma Zhifeng Yang, Yidi Zhang, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Yao Li, Xinghui Xia, Xinghui Xia, Yao Li, Chuanxin Ma Xiaohan Lin, Xinghui Xia, Xinghui Xia, Xiaohan Lin, Chuanxin Ma Jie Zhang, Chuanxin Ma Jie Zhang, Jie Zhang, Chuanxin Ma Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Chuanxin Ma Yao Li, Xinghui Xia, Yidi Zhang, Yidi Zhang, Yidi Zhang, Yidi Zhang, Xiaohan Lin, Xiaohan Lin, Xiaohan Lin, Yao Li, Jie Zhang, Chuanxin Ma Yidi Zhang, Yao Li, Zhifeng Yang, Yao Li, Yao Li, Yao Li, Zhifeng Yang, Jie Zhang, Chuanxin Ma Yidi Zhang, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Yidi Zhang, Xinghui Xia, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Xinghui Xia, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Chuanxin Ma Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Chuanxin Ma Zhifeng Yang, Chuanxin Ma Xinghui Xia, Xinghui Xia, Yao Li, Yao Li, Yao Li, Yao Li, Yao Li, Yao Li, Zhifeng Yang, Jie Zhang, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Yao Li, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Chuanxin Ma Chuanxin Ma Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Chuanxin Ma Zhifeng Yang, Zhifeng Yang, Chuanxin Ma Chuanxin Ma

Summary

Researchers exposed aquatic insect larvae to positively and negatively charged nanoplastics and found that the surface charge significantly affected how toxic the particles were. Positively charged nanoplastics caused more severe gut damage, greater accumulation in tissues, and bigger disruptions to gut bacteria. This matters because nanoplastics in the real environment carry various charges, and the findings suggest that charge is an important factor in determining health risks.

Nanoplastics (NPs), as an emerging contaminant, have usually been found charged in the environment, posing threats to aquatic animals. However, the underlying mechanisms governing the gut toxicity of differentially charged NPs to benthic insects are not well understood. In this study, the gut toxicity in larvae of <i>Chironomus kiinensis</i> exposed to negatively charged NPs (PS-COOH, 50 nm) and positively charged NPs (PS-NH<sub>2</sub>, 50 nm) at 0.1 and 1 g/kg was investigated through fluorescence imaging, histopathology, biochemical approaches, and 16S rRNA sequencing. The results showed that PS-NH<sub>2</sub> caused more adverse effect on the larval growth performance and induced more severe oxidative stress, epithelial damage, and inflammatory responses in the gut than PS-COOH. The stronger impact caused by PS-NH<sub>2</sub> was because the gut accumulated PS-NH<sub>2</sub> more readily than PS-COOH for its negatively charged cell membrane. In addition, PS-NH<sub>2</sub> were less agglomerated compared with PS-COOH, leading to an increased interaction with gut cell membranes and microbiota. Furthermore, alpha diversity and relative abundance of the keystone microbiota related to gut barrier and nutrient absorption were markedly lower exposed to PS-NH<sub>2</sub> than PS-COOH, indirectly exacerbating stronger gut and growth damage. This study provides novel insights into the effect mechanisms underlying differentially charged NPs on benthic insects.

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