0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Remediation Sign in to save

Mechanism of nanoplastics capture by jellyfish mucin and its potential as a sustainable water treatment technology

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 25 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.
Elias Haddad, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Elias Haddad, Elias Haddad, Eric A. Ben-David, Andy M. Booth Eric A. Ben-David, Andy M. Booth Eric A. Ben-David, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Elias Haddad, Andy M. Booth Elias Haddad, Elias Haddad, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Dror L. Angel, Dror L. Angel, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Maryana Habibi, Maryana Habibi, Maryana Habibi, Maryana Habibi, Maryana Habibi, Maryana Habibi, Maryana Habibi, Maryana Habibi, Eric A. Ben-David, Eric A. Ben-David, Eric A. Ben-David, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Dror L. Angel, Maryana Habibi, Elias Haddad, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Maryana Habibi, Andy M. Booth Isam Sabbah, Dror L. Angel, Andy M. Booth Dror L. Angel, Dror L. Angel, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Maryana Habibi, Andy M. Booth Elias Haddad, Elias Haddad, Maryana Habibi, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Elias Haddad, Elias Haddad, Andy M. Booth Elias Haddad, Marei Sammar, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Dror L. Angel, Dror L. Angel, Dror L. Angel, Marei Sammar, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Dror L. Angel, Dror L. Angel, Dror L. Angel, Andy M. Booth Dror L. Angel, Andy M. Booth Hila Dror, Isam Sabbah, Andy M. Booth Dror L. Angel, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Hila Dror, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Dror L. Angel, Andy M. Booth Isam Sabbah, Isam Sabbah, Haim Lahovitski, Haim Lahovitski, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Isam Sabbah, Isam Sabbah, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Haim Lahovitski, Haim Lahovitski, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Eric A. Ben-David, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Isam Sabbah, Isam Sabbah, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Dror L. Angel, Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth Andy M. Booth

Summary

Researchers investigated how jellyfish mucus from Aurelia sp. captures nanoplastics and compared its efficiency to conventional water treatment coagulants. The study found that jellyfish mucin effectively captures polystyrene and acrylic nanoplastics from wastewater treatment plant effluent, suggesting it could serve as a sustainable, bio-based technology for removing nanoplastic contamination from water.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

The accumulation of nanoplastics (NPs) in the environment has raised concerns about their impact on human health and the biosphere. The main aim of this study is to understand the mechanism that governs the capture of NPs by jellyfish mucus extracted from the jellyfish Aurelia sp. (A.a.) and compare the capture/removal efficiency to that of conventional coagulants and mucus from other organisms. The efficacy of A.a mucus to capture polystyrene and acrylic NPs (∼100 nm) from spiked wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) effluent was evaluated. The mucus effect on capture kinetics and destabilization of NPs of different polymer compositions, sizes and concentrations was quantified by means of fluorescent NPs, dynamic light scattering and zeta potential measurements and visualized by scanning electron microscopy. A dosing of A.a. mucus equivalent to protein concentrations of ∼2-4 mg L<sup>-1</sup> led to a rapid change in zeta potential from a baseline of -30 mV to values close to 0 mV, indicating a marked change from a stable to a non-stable dispersion leading to a rapid (<10 min) and significant removal of NPs (60 %-90 %) from a stable suspension. The A.a. mucus outperformed all other mucus types (0-37 %) and coagulants (0 %-32 % for ferric chloride; 23-40 % for poly aluminum chlorohydrate), highlighting the potential for jellyfish mucus to be used as bio-flocculant. The results indicate a mucus-particle interaction consisting of adsorption-bridging and "mesh" filtration. Further insight is provided by carbohydrate composition and protein disruption analysis. Total protein disruption resulted in a complete loss of the A.a. mucus capacity to capture NPs, while the breaking of disulfide bonds and protein unfolding resulted in improved capture capacity. The study demonstrates that natural jellyfish mucin can capture and remove NPs in water and wastewater treatment systems more efficiently than conventional coagulants, highlighting the potential for development of a new type of bio-flocculant.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper