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Toxicity Effects of Polystyrene Nanoplastics with Different Sizes on Freshwater Microalgae Chlorella vulgaris

Molecules 2023 31 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.
Qingqing Xiang, Qingqing Xiang, Qingqing Xiang, Qingqing Xiang, Ying Zhou Ying Zhou Qingqing Xiang, Cheng‐Xia Tan, Cheng‐Xia Tan, Qingqing Xiang, Ying Zhou Ying Zhou Qingqing Xiang, Qingqing Xiang, Ying Zhou Ying Zhou Ying Zhou Ying Zhou Ying Zhou Ying Zhou Ying Zhou

Summary

Researchers tested how two sizes of polystyrene nanoplastics (50 nm and 70 nm) affected the common freshwater microalgae Chlorella vulgaris. Both sizes reduced algae growth, chlorophyll content, and photosynthetic activity in a dose-dependent manner, with the smaller particles causing more damage. Since microalgae form the base of aquatic food chains, their sensitivity to nanoplastics could have cascading effects on entire freshwater ecosystems.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

The ubiquitous nature of plastics, particularly nanoplastics, raises concern about their potential effects on primary producer microalgae. Currently, the impacts and potential mechanisms of nanoplastics on microalgae are not fully understood. In this study, the effects of two plain commercial polystyrene nanoplastics (PS-NPs) with different sizes (50 nm and 70 nm) on <i>C. vulgaris</i> were assessed in a concentration range of 0-50 mg/L during 72 h exposure periods. Results revealed that both PS-NPs have dose-dependent toxicity effects on <i>C. vulgaris,</i> as confirmed by the decrease of growth rates, chlorophyll a and esterase activities, and the increase of ROS, MDA, and membrane damage. The membrane damage was caused by the agglomeration of PS-NPs on microalgae and may be the key reason for the toxicity. Compared with 70 nm PS-NPs (72 h EC<sub>50</sub> >50 mg/L), 50 nm PS-NPs posed greater adverse effects on algae, with an EC<sub>50-72h</sub> of 19.89 mg/L. FTIR results also proved the stronger variation of macromolecules in the 50 nm PS-NPs treatment group. This phenomenon might be related to the properties of PS-NPs in exposure medium. The lower absolute zeta potential value of 50 nm PS-NPs induced the stronger interaction between PS-NPs and algae as compared to 70 nm PS-NPs, leading to severe membrane damage and the loss of esterase activity as well as settlement. These findings emphasized the importance of considering the impacts of commercial PS-NPs properties in toxicity evaluation.

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