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Human Health Effects
Marine & Wildlife
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Concurrent water- and foodborne exposure to microplastics leads to differential microplastic ingestion and neurotoxic effects in zebrafish
Water Research2022
116 citations
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Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 60
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0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Cuizhu Ma,
Qiqing Chen,
Hairui Yu,
Hairui Yu,
Hairui Yu,
Hairui Yu,
Hairui Yu,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Cuizhu Ma,
Qiqing Chen,
Cuizhu Ma,
Hairui Yu,
Cuizhu Ma,
Cuizhu Ma,
Qiqing Chen,
Cuizhu Ma,
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Zhuo Gao,
Zhuo Gao,
Cuizhu Ma,
Qiqing Chen,
Cuizhu Ma,
Wenhui Qiu,
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Zhuo Gao,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Zhuo Gao,
Cuizhu Ma,
Cuizhu Ma,
Cuizhu Ma,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Hairui Yu,
Hairui Yu,
Hairui Yu,
Huahong Shi
Wenhai Chu,
Wenhui Qiu,
Hairui Yu,
Huahong Shi
Hairui Yu,
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Hairui Yu,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Zhuo Gao,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Zhuo Gao,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Cuizhu Ma,
Cuizhu Ma,
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Cuizhu Ma,
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Cuizhu Ma,
Zhuo Gao,
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Hairui Yu,
Wenhui Qiu,
Wenhui Qiu,
Wenhai Chu,
Hairui Yu,
Zhuo Gao,
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Wenhai Chu,
Huahong Shi
Wenhui Qiu,
Huahong Shi
Zhuo Gao,
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Wenhai Chu,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Wenhai Chu,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Hairui Yu,
Wenhui Qiu,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Hairui Yu,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Qiqing Chen,
Wenhui Qiu,
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Huahong Shi
Summary
Researchers compared how zebrafish are affected by microplastics ingested directly from water versus through their food chain. They found that the route of exposure made a significant difference, with food-chain transfer leading to different patterns of microplastic accumulation and more pronounced neurotoxic effects than waterborne exposure alone. The study highlights that trophic transfer is an important but often overlooked pathway for microplastic exposure in aquatic organisms.
Organisms constantly ingest microplastics directly from the environment or indirectly via trophic transfer due to the pervasiveness of microplastic pollution. However, most previous studies have only focused on waterborne exposure at the individual level, while few studies have investigated the contribution of trophic transfer to the exposure in organisms. We comprehensively evaluated the differences in microplastic ingestion and toxic effects in zebrafish exposed to microplastics via two concurrent routes (waterborne and foodborne). The polyethylene microplastics (40-47 μm, 0.1-10 mg/L) concentration used here was set in a range closed to the environmentally relevant microplastic concentrations, especially considering the extreme high concentration scenarios in wastewater. The concentration of microplastics resulting from foodborne exposure (0.01±0.01 μg/mg; 0.1±0.1 particles/mg) was significantly lower than that through waterborne exposure (0.06±0.02 μg/mg; 0.8±0.3 particles/mg), suggesting the ingestion of microplastics in their tissues occurs mainly through direct environmental uptake rather than food chain transfer (though the initial microplastic concentration was 1000 folds lower). However, more sublethal impacts, including the significant abnormal hyperactive swimming behaviour (107±5% induction; p< 0.05), were observed in the foodborne group than waterborne group. Additionally, ingenuity pathway analysis predicted both exposure routes caused obvious nervous system interference but through opposite modes of action. This was further verified by the alteration of neurotransmitter biomarkers that neurotoxicity mechanisms were completely different for the two exposure routes. The neurotoxic effects of microplastics are non-negligible and can exert together through both water- and foodborne exposure routes, which deserves further attention.