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Impact of progressively cumulative exposure of AgNPs on earthworms (Eisenia fetida) and implication for eco-toxicological risk assessment

Chemosphere 2023 18 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Caide Huang, Caide Huang, Caide Huang, Caide Huang, Caide Huang, Caide Huang, Wenhao Zhou, Shizhong Yue, Shizhong Yue, Shizhong Yue, Feng Xu, Shizhong Yue, Shizhong Yue, Caide Huang, Caide Huang, Shizhong Yue, Shizhong Yue, Shizhong Yue, Jia Li, Jia Li, Shizhong Yue, Yuhui Qiao Shizhong Yue, Kun Wang, Wenhao Zhou, Jia Li, Yuhui Qiao Wenhao Zhou, Wenhao Zhou, Kun Wang, Wenhao Zhou, Yuhui Qiao Wenhao Zhou, Yuhui Qiao

Summary

Researchers compared earthworm responses to silver nanoparticles delivered either all at once or progressively increasing doses over 28 days, finding that gradual exposure caused less tissue damage, lower bioaccumulation, and activated more detoxification pathways — suggesting that standard one-step laboratory toxicity tests may overestimate real-world ecological risk.

Hazardous pollutants released into the real environment mostly own long-lasting cumulative characteristics and have progressively negative impacts on organisms, which are always neglected in laboratory toxicological tests. Here in this study, the different ecotoxicity of Ag nanoparticles (AgNPs) on earthworm Eisenia fetida was compared via various endpoints and transcriptional sequencing between the 28-day progressively repeated (from 60 to 80, final 100 mg/kg) and one-step (directly to 100 mg/kg) exposure. The results showed that earthworms under progressively repeated exposure showed significantly less biomass loss and reproductive inhibition, as well as lower Ag bioaccumulation (15.6 mg/kg) compared with one-step exposure (17.9 mg/kg). The increases in enzyme activities (superoxide enzyme and catalase) and gene expression (metallothionein) also implied higher antioxidant and genetic toxicity in one-step exposed earthworms compared with those from progressively repeated exposure. Furthermore, the transcriptomic analysis identified 582 and 854 differentially expressed genes in the treatments of one-step and repeated exposure respectively compared with the control group. The results of pathway annotation and classification suggested similar enrichments of damage induction but different in toxic stress responses, whereas earthworms from repeated exposure possessed more detoxification-related pathways like translation and multicellular organismal processes. This study innovatively took into account the impacts of processive exposure occurring in the real environment and elucidated distinctions of toxicity and adaptation caused by different exposure patterns, which provided the theoretical basis for real risk identification under the framework and guidance of traditional toxicology, also the implication for the improvement of eco-toxicological risk assessment.

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