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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. Human Health Effects Nanoplastics Sign in to save

Role of heteroaggregation and internalization in the toxicity of differently sized and charged plastic nanoparticles to freshwater microalgae

Environmental Pollution 2022 51 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.
Ana Romero‐Freire, Xing Li, Xing Li, Hao Qiu Xing Li, Erkai He, Erkai He, Hao Qiu Erkai He, Hao Qiu Erkai He, Erkai He, Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Erkai He, Erkai He, Erkai He, Peihua Zhang, Erkai He, Erkai He, Hao Qiu Xing Li, Erkai He, Lan Song, Erkai He, Hao Qiu Ana Romero‐Freire, Erkai He, Hao Qiu Lan Song, Hao Qiu Erkai He, Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Erkai He, Erkai He, Lan Song, Erkai He, Ana Romero‐Freire, Ana Romero‐Freire, Lan Song, Hao Qiu Peihua Zhang, Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Erkai He, Erkai He, Xing Li, Xing Li, Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Erkai He, Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Peihua Zhang, Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Hao Qiu Hao Qiu

Summary

Researchers investigated how the size and surface charge of polystyrene nanoparticles affect their toxicity to freshwater microalgae. The study found that smaller and positively charged nanoparticles showed greater heteroaggregation with algal cells and higher internalization rates, leading to more pronounced toxic effects including reduced photosynthetic activity.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

The toxic effect of waterborne nanoplastics is a manifestation of bio-nano interfacial interactions. Although nanoplastics with different physicochemical characteristics are known to exhibit distinct toxicities, it remains poorly understood how the properties of nanoplastics affect the bio-nano interface interactions. Here, polystyrene nanoparticles (PSNPs) varying in size (50, 300, and 500 nm) and surface charge (negative and positive charge) were employed to explore the interplay between PSNPs and algal cells (Chlamydomonas reinhardtii), with special focus on the heteroaggregation of PSNPs and microalgae, PSNPs cellular internalization, and cellular physiological responses. Results showed that large-sized PSNPs (300 and 500 nm) caused apparent toxicity to C. reinhardtii, mainly due to light blockage resulting from the PSNPs-microalgae heteroaggregation and the shading effect of PSNPs, which was independent of PSNPs concentrations. However, the toxicity of small-sized PSNPs (50 nm) was controlled by both particle surface charge and particle concentration. The positively charged PS-NH was more readily heteroaggregated with microalgae than the negatively charged PS-COOH, leading to photosynthesis damage-induced toxicity. Increasing the concentration of small-sized PSNPs stimulated the secretion of extracellular polymeric substances, allowing more PSNPs to attach on the cell surface and further to enter the cell, which was responsible for the increased toxicity. These findings provide new insights into how nanoplastics induce contact toxicity in microalgae cells through specific biointerfacial interactions.

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