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Nano-sized polystyrene plastics toxicity to microalgae Chlorella vulgaris: Toxicity mitigation using humic acid

Aquatic Toxicology 2022 49 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Parichehr Hanachi, Mehdi Khoshnamvand, Tony R. ‎Walker, Amir Hossein Hamidian

Summary

Researchers exposed the green microalga Chlorella vulgaris to amino-functionalized polystyrene nanoplastics and found significant toxicity to biomass and chlorophyll, but adding humic acid — a natural organic matter component — substantially reduced toxicity by coating the nanoplastics' positively charged surfaces and preventing their electrostatic attraction to algal cell walls.

Polymers

Polystyrene nanoplastics (PS-NPs) can cause toxicity in aquatic organisms, but presence of natural organic matter (NOM) may alter toxicity of PS-NPs. To better understand effects of NOM on acute toxicity of PS-NPs, humic acid (HA) as a model of NOM was added to green microalga Chlorella vulgaris medium in the presence of amino-functionalized polystyrene nanoplastics (PS-NH). Acute toxicity tests of PS-NH to C. vulgaris biomass and chlorophyll a content showed statistical differences between media treated with different concentrations of PS-NH and control groups (p<0.05). HA significantly mitigated PS-NH toxicity to C. vulgaris biomass and chlorophyll a end-points (p<0.05). Additionally, high HA concentration was more effective than low concentration (10 vs 5 mg/L), showing a greater ameliorative effect on PS-NH acute toxicity (p<0.05). Algae exposed to higher PS-NH concentrations showed greater morphological changes (i.e., diminution of photosynthetic pigments, reduction of algal size and formation of more cellular aggregates). Formation of high amounts of algal aggregates under influence of PS-NH was presumably related to the high electrostatic tendency of these particles (with positively charged surfaces) to C. vulgaris polysaccharide walls (having negative charge). Formation of aggregates was significantly reduced in the presence of HA. HA with dominant negatively charged functional groups (following sorption by PS-NH via reduction of PS-NH zeta potential), could decrease electrostatic attraction between PS-NH and algae, thereby substantially ameliorating cellular aggregation and cell size reduction.

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