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 Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Remediation Reproductive & Development Sign in to save

Embryotoxicity of Polystyrene Microspheres of Different Sizes to the Marine Medaka Oryzias melastigma (McClelland, 1839)

Water 2022 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jincan Chen, Chao Fang, Jincan Chen, Jincan Chen, Chao Fang, Jincan Chen, Chao Fang, Chao Fang, Chao Fang, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Chao Fang, Chao Fang, Chao Fang, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Chao Fang, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Jun Bo Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Jun Bo Ronghui Zheng, Jun Bo Chao Fang, Ronghui Zheng, Ronghui Zheng, Jincan Chen, Chao Fang, Ronghui Zheng, Chao Fang, Chao Fang, Chao Fang, Jincan Chen, Jun Bo Chao Fang, Jun Bo Chao Fang, Jun Bo Jun Bo Jun Bo Jun Bo Jun Bo Jun Bo Jun Bo

Summary

Researchers assessed microplastic contamination in bottled and tap water samples from 16 countries, detecting plastic particles in nearly all samples. Bottled water contained on average twice the concentration of tap water, with polypropylene and polyethylene terephthalate dominating.

Polymers
Body Systems

Polystyrene microplastics (PS-MPs) are potentially harmful to marine organisms, especially during the early developmental stages, although the underlying mechanism remains unclear. The present study evaluated the growth and morphological characteristics of marine medaka Oryzias melastigma (McClelland, 1839) embryos exposed to PS-MP. PS-MPs of three different sizes (0.05, 0.5, and 6.0 μm with a concentration of 106 particles/L) were subjected to waterborne exposure for 19 d. The hatching time and rate of embryos exposed to 0.5 and 6.0 μm PS-MPs were significantly lower than those of the control, while no significant difference was observed in the 0.05 μm treatment. No significant differences were observed in the mortality rate of the embryos, embryo diameter, and relevant gene expression levels, including il6, il8, il-1β, jak, stat-3, nf-κb, hif-1α, epo, cyp1a1, ahr, sod, cat, and gpx, but with the exception of vtg. Fluorescent PS-MPs were found on the embryo surfaces when the embryos were exposed to 0.5 and 6.0 μm PS-MPs, but no signals were detected inside embryos using confocal microscopy. Therefore, the results indicate that PS-MPs having a diameter of 6.0 μm can only attach to the surface or villus of embryos and not enter the embryos through the membrane pores, whereas PS-MPs with diameters of 0.05 and 0.5 μm cannot enter the embryos.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper