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Randomly-shaped nanoplastics induced stronger biotoxicity targeted to earthworm Eisenia fetida species: Differential effects and the underlying mechanisms of realistic and commercial polystyrene nanoplastics
Summary
Researchers compared the toxicity of commercially produced spherical nanoplastics with irregularly shaped nanoplastics that more closely resemble what is found in the real environment, testing both on earthworms. The randomly shaped particles were significantly more toxic, causing greater oxidative stress, DNA damage, and tissue injury at lower concentrations. The findings suggest that most lab studies using uniform spherical particles may underestimate the actual environmental risks of nanoplastic pollution.
Nanoplastics (NPs) are widely distributed in various environments, including soil, and have been known to adversely affect soil organisms. Currently, most of the obtained studies were principally focused on the ecological risks of commercial sphere-type microbeads (SNPs), while ignoring that they might be different from randomly-shaped nanoplastics (RNPs) in a real environment. Thus, this study was undertaken to probe the shape-dependent effects of NPs on the earthworm Eisenia fetida and the corresponding poisoning mechanisms, and discriminate the toxicity differences between SNPs and RNPs at the molecule, cell, tissue, and animal levels. The results showed SNPs and RNPs exhibited lethal effects to earthworms with the LC determined to be 27.42 g/kg and 21.69 g/kg, respectively after a 28-day exposure. SNPs and RNPs exposure can cause ROS-induced ROS release in worm, inducing oxidative stress through mitochondria-mediated pathway, leading to lipid peroxidation, DNA damage, and histopathological changes, thereby contributing to decreased stress resistance against exogenous stressors. To reduce ROS-mediated oxidative damage, the antioxidant defense system in E. fetida can be activated, which scavenges unwanted ROS. High doses of SNPs and RNPs inhibited the AChE activity in worms, causing excess acetylcholine accumulation in the synaptic space, which finally lead to neurotoxicity. Also, two kinds of NPs can induce the abnormal expression of genes relevant to oxidative stress, reproduction, growth, and tight junction protein in E. fetida, which ultimately contribute to various detrimental effects, tissue damage and dysfunction, reproductive and developmental toxicity. The results obtained from the Integrated Biological Response (IBR) suggested that long-term exposure to high-dose SNPs and RNPs can induce the stronger toxicity effects to E. fetida worms, and RNPs-induced toxicity can be different and stronger than that of SNPs. Our results provide insights for revealing the environmental effects posed by randomly-shaped NPs-contaminated soil, and are of importance for assessing the contribution of NPs with different physical characteristics to soil eco-safety.
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