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Assessing the role of polyethylene microplastics as a vector for organic pollutants in soil: Ecotoxicological and molecular approaches

Chemosphere 2021 94 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.
Carmen Martı́n, Carmen Fajardo, Carmen Martı́n, Carmen Fajardo, Carmen Martı́n, Carmen Fajardo, Carmen Fajardo, S. Sánchez‐Fortún, Gonzalo Costa, Carmen Fajardo, Carmen Fajardo, Carmen Fajardo, Carmen Martı́n, Gonzalo Costa, Gonzalo Costa, Gonzalo Costa, S. Sánchez‐Fortún, Carmen Martı́n, S. Sánchez‐Fortún, S. Sánchez‐Fortún, S. Sánchez‐Fortún, Mar Nande, Casilda Rodríguez, Mar Nande, Casilda Rodríguez, J. J. De Lucas, Gerardo Mengs, Gerardo Mengs, Mar Nande, Mar Nande, Gonzalo Costa, Mar Nande, Mar Nande, Gerardo Mengs, Mar Nande, Mar Nande, Gonzalo Costa, Gonzalo Costa, Margarita Martín, Gerardo Mengs, Gerardo Mengs, Margarita Martín Margarita Martín S. Sánchez‐Fortún, Margarita Martín, S. Sánchez‐Fortún, Margarita Martín, Margarita Martín Margarita Martín, Margarita Martín

Summary

Polyethylene microplastics were shown to act as vectors for organic pollutants including pharmaceuticals and pesticides in soil, with earthworm bioaccumulation assays and molecular endpoints revealing that MPs increased contaminant uptake compared to soil exposure alone.

Polymers
Body Systems

Microplastics (MPs), pharmaceuticals and pesticides are emerging pollutants with proposed negative impacts on the environment. Rising interest in investigations of MPs is likely related to their potential to accumulate in agricultural systems as the base of the food chain. We applied an integrated approach using classic bioassays and molecular methods to evaluate the impact associated with a mixture of three types of polyethylene (PE) microbeads, namely, white (W), blue (B), and fluorescent blue (FB), and their interactions with pollutants (OCs), including ibuprofen (IB), sertraline (STR), amoxicillin (AMX) and simazine (SZ), on different soil organisms. PE-MPs exhibited different abilities for the adsorption of each OC; W selectively adsorbed higher amounts of SZ, whereas B and FB preferably retained AMX. Standard soil was artificially contaminated with OCs and MPs (alone or combined with OCs) and incubated for 30 days. The presence of MPs or MPs and OCs (MIX) in soil did not produce any effect on Caenorhabditis elegans endpoint growth, reproduction, or survival. Inhibition of leaf growth in Zea mays was detected, but this negative effect declined over time, while the inhibition of root growth increased, especially when OCs (32%) or MIX (47%) were added. Moreover, the expression of the antioxidant genes CAT 1, SOD-1A and GST 1 on plants was affected by the treatments studied. The addition of MPs or MIX significantly affected the soil bacterial phylogenetic profile, which selectively enriched members of the bacterial community (particularly Proteobacteria). The predicted functional profiles of MP/MIX samples indicated a potential impact on the carbon and nitrogen cycle within the soil environment. Our results indicate that MPs and their capability to act as pollutant carriers affect soil biota; further studies should be carried out on the bioavailability of OCs adsorbed by microplastics and how long it takes to leach these OCs into different organisms and/or ecosystems.

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