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Influence of ultraviolet-aging and adsorbed pollutants on toxicological effects of polyvinyl chloride microplastics to zebrafish

Environmental Pollution 2022 69 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.
Yuheng Zhong, Qi Ding, Zhiyi Huang, Xiangxiang Xiao, Xiaofeng Han, Yanrong Su, Dali Wang, Jing You

Summary

Researchers studied how UV aging changes polyvinyl chloride microplastics and their toxicity to zebrafish, both alone and when carrying adsorbed pollutants. They found that aged microplastics caused more severe gut damage and oxidative stress than pristine particles, due to increased free radicals on their surfaces. When carrying adsorbed chlorpyrifos or erythromycin, the microplastics served as pollutant carriers into fish, producing greater behavioral disruption and gut microbiome alterations.

Polymers

Microplastics (MPs) undergo various aging processes and interact with diverse pollutants in the environment. In the present study, we investigated the influence of ultraviolet (UV) aging on the adsorption of organic pollutants by polyvinyl chloride microplastics (mPVC) and explored toxicity variations among pristine, aged, and pollutant-loaded mPVCs to zebrafish. Irradiation of UV for 30 d significantly changed the physiochemical properties of mPVC, leading to more oxygen-containing groups and free radicals (O, ·O, and ·OH) on mPVC surfaces. The aging process reduced the adsorption of mPVC against a hydrophobic compound chlorpyrifos (CPF) but enhanced the adsorption against a moderately hydrophilic compound erythromycin (ERY). Ingestion of CPF- and ERY-loaded mPVCs resulted in bioaccumulation of the two compounds in zebrafish, suggesting a carrier effect of mPVCs. In toxicity tests, the aged mPVC caused severer gut damages, stronger oxidative stresses, and greater interference with the gut microbiota in zebrafish than the pristine mPVC. The CPF and ERY-loaded mPVCs produced lower oxidative stresses in zebrafish than mPVCs alone, due to fewer radicals on mPVC surfaces after the adsorption of organic contaminants. Notably, the CPF and ERY-loaded mPVCs presented greater effects on fish swimming behaviors and gut microbial compositions, which was associated with the released CPF and ERY from mPVCs within the zebrafish. Overall, the present study demonstrated significant influences of UV-aging and the adsorbed pollutants on the toxicological effects of MPs and highlighted the necessity to perform toxicity studies of MPs using more environmentally relevant MPs.

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