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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. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Sign in to save

Combined ingestion of polystyrene microplastics and epoxiconazole increases health risk to mice: Based on their synergistic bioaccumulation in vivo

Environment International 2022 68 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.
Yu Wang, Wei Sun, Zhiyuan Meng, Wei Sun, Yu Wang, Zhiyuan Meng, Yu Wang, Ming Jia, Sen Yan, Ming Jia, Sen Yan, Wentao Zhu Wentao Zhu Zhiyuan Meng, Yu Wang, Yu Wang, Zhiyuan Meng, Yu Wang, Wentao Zhu Sinuo Tian, Sinuo Tian, Sinuo Tian, Sinuo Tian, Yu Wang, Yu Wang, Yu Wang, Ming Jia, Wentao Zhu Zhiqiang Zhou, Yu Wang, Ming Jia, Zhiyuan Meng, Wei Sun, Ming Jia, Ming Jia, Ming Jia, Ming Jia, Sen Yan, Shiran Huang, Shiran Huang, Shiran Huang, Wentao Zhu Shiran Huang, Shiran Huang, Shiran Huang, Yu Wang, Yu Wang, Yu Wang, Sinuo Tian, Sinuo Tian, Sinuo Tian, Sinuo Tian, Zhiyuan Meng, Wentao Zhu Wentao Zhu Yu Wang, Yu Wang, Zhiyuan Meng, Zhiqiang Zhou, Zhiqiang Zhou, Jinling Diao, Wentao Zhu Zhiyuan Meng, Zhiqiang Zhou, Wentao Zhu Sen Yan, Jinling Diao, Zhiqiang Zhou, Sinuo Tian, Zhiqiang Zhou, Wentao Zhu Sinuo Tian, Wentao Zhu

Summary

Researchers found that combined exposure to polystyrene microplastics and the pesticide epoxiconazole caused more severe liver and kidney damage in mice than either pollutant alone. The study suggests that microplastics and pesticides have a synergistic toxic effect, where pesticide-induced gut barrier damage allows greater microplastic accumulation in tissues, which in turn interferes with pesticide clearance.

Polymers
Body Systems
Models
Study Type In vivo

Microplastic and pesticide are two common environmental pollutants whose adverse effects have been widely reported, but it is unclear whether they cause combined toxicity in mammals. In this study, polystyrene microplastics (5 µm, 0.012 or 0.120 mg/kg) or/and epoxiconazole (0.080 mg/kg) were administered orally to mice for 6 weeks, their toxicity to liver and kidney was assessed from changes in histopathology, tissue function, oxidative defense system and metabolic profile. In addition, mechanism of combined toxicity was explored in terms of bioaccumulation levels, intestinal barrier, gut microbiota. Results showed that combined ingestion of polystyrene (0.120 mg/kg) and epoxiconazole caused more severe tissue damage, dysfunction, oxidative stress, and metabolic disorders compared to single exposure sources. Interestingly, occurrence of combined toxicity was associated with their increased accumulation in tissues. In-depth exploration found that epoxiconazole caused intestinal barrier damage by targeting the gut microbiota, leading to massive invasion and accumulation of polystyrene, which in turn interfered with the metabolic clearance of epoxiconazole in liver. In all, findings highlighted that polystyrene and epoxiconazole could cause combined toxicity in mice through the synergistic effect of their bioaccumulation in vivo, which provided new reference for understanding the health risks of microplastics and pesticides and sheds light on the potential risk to humans of their combined ingestion.

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