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Polymer Chemical Identity as a Key Factor in Microplastic–Insecticide Antagonistic Effects during Embryogenesis of Sea Urchin Arbacia lixula

International Journal of Molecular Sciences 2023 8 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.
Ines Kovačić, Petra Burić, Petra Burić, Ines Kovačić, Daniel Mark Lyons Ines Kovačić, Lara Jurković, Rahime Oral, Rahime Oral, Ines Kovačić, Lara Jurković, Petra Burić, Rahime Oral, Serkan Tez, Serkan Tez, Rahime Oral, Ines Kovačić, Lara Jurković, Petra Burić, Serkan Tez, Serkan Tez, Serkan Tez, Ines Kovačić, Petra Burić, Petra Burić, Petra Burić, Petra Burić, Rahime Oral, Rahime Oral, Rahime Oral, Daniel Mark Lyons Daniel Mark Lyons Daniel Mark Lyons Ines Kovačić, Nediljko Landeka, Nediljko Landeka, Nediljko Landeka, Petra Burić, Nediljko Landeka, Petra Burić, Daniel Mark Lyons Daniel Mark Lyons Ines Kovačić, Daniel Mark Lyons Daniel Mark Lyons Petra Burić, Daniel Mark Lyons Daniel Mark Lyons

Summary

Researchers found that the chemical identity of microplastic polymers determines their interactive effects with insecticides during sea urchin embryo development, with polystyrene and polymethylmethacrylate showing distinctly different antagonistic effects on fertilization and embryogenesis.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

As a proxy for pollutants that may be simultaneously present in urban wastewater streams, the effects of two microplastics-polystyrene (PS; 10, 80 and 230 μm diameter) and polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA; 10 and 50 μm diameter)-on fertilisation and embryogenesis in the sea urchin <i>Arbacia lixula</i> with co-exposure to the pyrethroid insecticide cypermethrin were investigated. Synergistic or additive effects were not seen for plastic microparticles (50 mg L<sup>-1</sup>) in combination with cypermethrin (10 and 1000 μg L<sup>-1</sup>) based on evaluation of skeletal abnormalities or arrested development and death of significant numbers of larvae during the embryotoxicity assay. This behaviour was also apparent for male gametes pretreated with PS and PMMA microplastics and cypermethrin, where a reduction in sperm fertilisation ability was not evidenced. However, a modest reduction in the quality of the offspring was noted, suggesting that there may be some transmissible damage to the zygotes. PMMA microparticles were more readily taken up than PS microparticles, which could suggest surface chemical identity as potentially modulating the affinity of larvae for specific plastics. In contrast, significantly reduced toxicity was noted for the combination of PMMA microparticles and cypermethrin (100 μg L<sup>-1</sup>), and may be related to less ready desorption of the pyrethroid than PS, as well as cypermethrin activating mechanisms that result in reduced feeding and hence decreased ingestion of microparticles.

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