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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. Nanoplastics Sign in to save

Understanding the biological impact of organic pollutants absorbed by nanoplastics

Environmental Pollution 2022 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yong Jie Yip, Gomathi Mahadevan, Yong Jie Yip, Gomathi Mahadevan, Suresh Valiyaveettil, Yong Jie Yip, Suresh Valiyaveettil, Gomathi Mahadevan, Yong Jie Yip, Teresa Stephanie Tay, Gomathi Mahadevan, Gomathi Mahadevan, Suresh Valiyaveettil, Suresh Valiyaveettil, Suresh Valiyaveettil, Teresa Stephanie Tay, Teresa Stephanie Tay, Suresh Valiyaveettil, Mei Lin Neo Suresh Valiyaveettil, Suresh Valiyaveettil, Suresh Valiyaveettil, Mei Lin Neo Mei Lin Neo Mei Lin Neo Mei Lin Neo Gomathi Mahadevan, Serena Lay‐Ming Teo, Mei Lin Neo Suresh Valiyaveettil, Serena Lay‐Ming Teo, Serena Lay‐Ming Teo, Suresh Valiyaveettil, Serena Lay‐Ming Teo, Mei Lin Neo Suresh Valiyaveettil, Suresh Valiyaveettil, Suresh Valiyaveettil, Serena Lay‐Ming Teo, Suresh Valiyaveettil, Suresh Valiyaveettil, Mei Lin Neo

Summary

Researchers assessed the toxicity of diphenylamine (DPA) incorporated into PMMA nanoparticles using barnacle larvae as a model organism, investigating how nanoplastics act as carrier vectors that increase the bioavailability of persistent organic pollutants and enhance biological impacts beyond those of either contaminant alone.

Polymers

Many organisms are consuming food contaminated with micro- and nanoparticles of plastics, some of which absorb persistent organic pollutants (POPs) from the environment and acting as carrier vectors for increasing the bioavailability in living organisms. We recently reported that polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) nanoparticles at low concentrations are not toxic to animal models tested. In this study, the toxicity of diphenylamine (DPA) incorporated PMMA nanoparticles are assessed using barnacle larvae as a model organism. The absorption capacity of DPA from water for commercially available virgin PMMA microparticles is relatively low (0.14 wt%) during a 48 h period, which did not induce exposure toxicity to barnacle nauplii. Thus, PMMA nanoparticles encapsulated with high concentrations of DPA (DPA-enc-PMMA) were prepared through a reported precipitation method to achieve 40% loading of DPA inside the particles. Toxicity of DPA-enc-PMMA nanoparticles were tested using freshly spawned acorn barnacle nauplii. The observed mortality of nauplii from DPA-enc-PMMA exposure was compared to the values obtained from pure DPA exposure in water. The mortality among the exposed acorn barnacle nauplii did not exceed 50% even at a high concentration of DPA inside the PMMA nanoparticles. The results suggest that the slow release of pollutants from polymer nanoparticles may not induce significant toxicity to the organism living in a dynamic environment. The impact of long-term exposure of DPA absorbed plastic nanoparticles need to be investigated in the future.

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