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Reproductive toxicity of polystyrene nanoplastics in Drosophila melanogaster under multi-generational exposure

Chemosphere 2023 43 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.
Qinghui Tu, Jianhao Deng, Miaomiao Di, Xiaorong Lin, Zhongzheng Chen, Bin Li, Ling Tian, Yuanyuan Zhang

Summary

Researchers exposed fruit flies to polystyrene nanoplastics across five consecutive generations and found increasing reproductive harm over time, including reduced egg laying and offspring survival. The damage worsened with each generation even at the same exposure levels, suggesting cumulative effects. The study indicates that nanoplastic exposure may pose growing reproductive risks across generations of organisms.

Polymers
Body Systems
Study Type In vivo

Micro-nanoplastics have become a new type of pollutant worldwide and have attracted widespread attention for their potential toxicity. However, the toxicity of polystyrene nanoplastics (PS-NPs) under continuous exposure of multi-generations is still unclear. In the present study, Drosophila melanogaster was selected as an in vivo biological model to investigate the reproductive toxicity and underlying mechanism induced by PS-NPs (100 nm; 1, 10, 50, and 100 mg L) after continuous exposure of five generations. The results showed that PS-NPs accumulated in the crop, gut and ovaries after 5 d of exposure. It was also observed that the number of egg production and eclosion rate decreased significantly (P < 0.05) accompanied by delayed development during continuous exposure PS-NPs of multi-generations. Further analysis revealed that the degree of apoptosis and necrosis of oocytes in the F5 generation increased with the increasing exposure dose. To elucidate the underlying toxicity mechanism mediated by PS-NPs, transcriptomic analysis was performed on the ovaries of the F5 generation. The results showed that there were 102 and 208 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in the 1 mg L and 100 mg L PS-NPs treatment groups, respectively, compared with the control group. The transcriptome analysis further detected the KEGG pathway with significant enrichment of DEGs, revealing obvious reproductive toxicity at the molecular level. In conclusion, this research not only highlighted the negative physiological effects of multi-generational exposure to PS-NPs on Drosophila melanogaster, but also explored potential mechanisms by transcriptomic analysis to better understand reproductive toxicity induced by multi-generational exposure.

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