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Microplastics and bisphenol A hamper gonadal development of whiteleg shrimp (Litopenaeus vannamei) by interfering with metabolism and disrupting hormone regulation

The Science of The Total Environment 2021 124 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Wei Shi, Weishang Zhou, Weishang Zhou, Weishang Zhou, Weishang Zhou, Yu Han, Yu Tang, Weishang Zhou, Weishang Zhou, Yu Han, Yu Tang, Yu Tang, Yu Tang, Yu Tang, Yu Tang, Wei Shi, Wei Shi, Yu Han, Wei Shi, Weishang Zhou, Wei Shi, Wei Shi, Wei Shi, Wei Shi, Yu Tang, Yu Tang, Yu Han, Yu Han, Yu Han, Weishang Zhou, Yu Han, Yu Han, Yu Tang, Wei Shi, Yu Tang, Yu Han, Yu Tang, Yu Han, Yu Tang, Wei Shi, Yu Han, Yu Tang, Yu Tang, Weishang Zhou, Yu Tang, Guangxu Liu Yu Han, Wei Shi, Yu Tang, Wei Shi, Guangxu Liu Yu Han, Weishang Zhou, Yu Han, Weishang Zhou, Weishang Zhou, Weishang Zhou, Yu Han, Yu Han, Yu Han, Yu Tang, Wei Shi, Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Wei Shi, Wei Shi, Wei Shi, Weishang Zhou, Weishang Zhou, Weishang Zhou, Weishang Zhou, Yu Han, Yu Tang, Yu Tang, Yu Tang, Yu Tang, Hongxiang Sun, Yu Tang, Jiongming Zhang, Weishang Zhou, Jiongming Zhang, Weishang Zhou, Weishang Zhou, Wei Shi, Guangxu Liu Wei Shi, Wei Shi, Wei Shi, Yu Han, Weishang Zhou, Guangxu Liu Wei Shi, Weishang Zhou, Guangxu Liu Jiongming Zhang, Guangxu Liu Weishang Zhou, Guangxu Liu Wei Shi, Maocang Yan, Wei Shi, Maocang Yan, Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Wei Shi, Guangxu Liu Wei Shi, Guangxu Liu Maocang Yan, Guangxu Liu Lihua Hu, Jiongming Zhang, Wei Shi, Weishang Zhou, Guangxu Liu Hongxiang Sun, Wei Shi, Guangxu Liu Weishang Zhou, Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Wei Shi, Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Wei Shi, Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Wei Shi, Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu Guangxu Liu

Summary

Researchers studied how microplastics and the industrial chemical bisphenol A, individually and combined, affect reproductive development in whiteleg shrimp. Both pollutants suppressed gonadal growth, disrupted metabolism, and interfered with hormone regulation, with the combination proving more toxic than either substance alone. The findings suggest that microplastics and BPA together may pose a significant threat to the reproductive success of commercially important crustacean species.

Study Type In vivo

Gonadal development is a prerequisite for the reproductive success of an organism, and might be affected by environmental factors such as emergent pollutants. Although marine crustaceans are threatened by ubiquitous emergent pollutants such as microplastics (MPs) and bisphenol A (BPA) under realistic scenarios, studies about the impacts of these pollutants on the gonadal development of crustacean species are rare. In this study, the effects of MPs and BPA, alone or in combination, on gonadal development were investigated in whiteleg shrimp (Litopenaeus vannamei). The results obtained demonstrated that whiteleg shrimp exposed to MPs and BPA had significantly smaller gonad-somatic index (GSI) and an obvious delay in the gonad developmental stage. In addition, exposure of whiteleg shrimp to pollutants tested resulted in a reduction in the oxygen consumption rate, elevation in the ammonia excretion rate, decline in the O: N ratio, and downregulation in the expression of metabolism-related genes, indicating significant disruptions of shrimp metabolism by the pollutants. Furthermore, in addition to a few exceptions, both the in vivo contents of gonadal development-related hormones (GIH and MIH) and the expression of genes encoding regulatory hormones (GIH, MIH, and CHH) were upregulated by the exposure of whiteleg shrimp to the pollutants investigated, suggesting a significant obstruction of endocrine regulation. Moreover, MP-BPA coexposure was shown to be more toxic to whiteleg shrimp than the corresponding single exposures and significantly greater amount of BPA accumulated in the gonads (both testis and ovaries) of shrimp with the coexistence of MPs, which may be caused by the Trojan horse effect and summation of the toxic impacts on common targets. In general, the data obtained in this study demonstrated that MPs and BPA at environmentally realistic concentrations significantly inhibited the gonadal development of whiteleg shrimp probably by interfering with metabolism and disrupting endocrine regulation.

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