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Influence of Pristine and Photoaging Polystyrene Microspheres on Sperm Quality and DNA Integrity of the Sand Dollars Scaphechinus mirabilis

Journal of Xenobiotics 2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Andrey Alexandrovich Mazur, Sergey Petrovich Kukla, Victor Pavlovich Chelomin, Valentina Vladimirovna Slobodskova, Nadezhda Vladimirovna Dovzhenko

Summary

Researchers exposed sand dollar (Scaphechinus mirabilis) sperm to pristine and UV-photoaged polystyrene microspheres, finding that photoaged particles caused significantly greater reductions in sperm motility and increased DNA damage than pristine particles.

Polymers
Body Systems

Plastic pollution represents a significant emerging environmental problem. Micro-sized particles of synthetic polymers-microplastics (MPs)-have been identified in all parts of marine ecosystems. In the marine environment, organisms are exposed to MPs, which undergo a constant process of physicochemical and biological degradation. Utilization of UV irradiation as the optimal exposure factor in the simulation of fundamental natural conditions is a widely accepted approach. This enables the study of the harmful effects of such particles when interacting with aquatic organisms. This study aimed to investigate the effect of pristine and photoaging primary polystyrene microspheres (µPS) at three concentrations on the viability and DNA integrity of the sperm of the sand dollars Scaphechinus mirabilis. The results of the investigation demonstrated that IR spectroscopy revealed structural changes in polystyrene, confirming the oxidative degradation of the polymer under UV irradiation. The study demonstrated that artificially aged µPS exhibited a more pronounced effect than pristine particles, as evidenced by reduced sperm viability and increased DNA damage. Thus, the resazurin test showed that after exposure to UV-irradiated µPS, sperm viability decreased to 83-85% at concentrations of 10 and 100 particles and to 70% at a concentration of 1000. In addition, the Comet assay showed that the particles increased the percentage of DNA in the tail from 20% to 30% in a dose-dependent manner. The findings substantiate and augment the existing body of experimental data of the toxicity of aged plastic fragments, thereby underscoring the need for further study into the toxicity of aged MPs on marine invertebrates.

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