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The Toxicity of Polyester Fibers in Xenopuslaevis

Water 2021 24 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.
Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Renato Bacchetta Anna Winkler, Renato Bacchetta Renato Bacchetta Anna Winkler, Paolo Tremolada, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Renato Bacchetta Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Paolo Tremolada, Anna Winkler, Renato Bacchetta Nadia Santo, Anna Winkler, Nadia Santo, Nadia Santo, Anna Winkler, Renato Bacchetta Nadia Santo, Renato Bacchetta Nadia Santo, Nadia Santo, Nadia Santo, Anna Winkler, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Paolo Tremolada, Nadia Santo, Nadia Santo, Paolo Tremolada, Renato Bacchetta Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Nadia Santo, Paolo Tremolada, Renato Bacchetta Renato Bacchetta Nadia Santo, Renato Bacchetta Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Renato Bacchetta Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Renato Bacchetta Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Renato Bacchetta Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Renato Bacchetta

Summary

Polyester fibers taken from dryer lint were found to cause developmental toxicity in Xenopus laevis larvae, with effects differing from laboratory microplastic beads, highlighting the importance of testing environmentally realistic heterogeneous microplastic samples rather than uniform model particles.

Body Systems

Microplastics are practically ubiquitous and pose a serious survival challenge for many species. Most of the exposure experiments for determining the toxicological effects of microplastics were performed with a microplastic varying little in shape and size (often purchased microplastic beads), but few studies deal with non-homogeneous samples. We analyzed the effect on Xenopuslaevis larva on the early development of polyester fibers, PEFs, taken from a dryer machine in which 100% polyester fabrics were dried after washing. Three concentrations were tested. The results showed that the gastrointestinal tract, GIT, was the most affected system by PEFs which modified the normal shape of the intestine with an EC50 96 h value of 6.3 µg mL−1. Fibers were observed to press against the digestive epithelium, deforming the normal architecture of the gut, sometimes pushing deep into the epithelium until piercing it. Physical GIT occlusion was observed in a concentration-dependent manner. However, no other damages were registered. No mortality was observed, but PEF-exposed larvae showed a significant reduction in their mobility. The results of the present paper suggest that environmental samples with their heterogeneity may have adverse effects on X. laevis development.

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