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Assessing the Impact of Chrysene-Sorbed Polystyrene Microplastics on Different Life Stages of the Mediterranean Mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis

Applied Sciences 2021 15 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.
Marco Capolupo, Marco Capolupo, Sadia Sharmin, Marco Capolupo, Marco Capolupo, Marco Capolupo, Daniele Fabbri Marco Capolupo, Daniele Fabbri Sadia Sharmin, Elena Fabbri, Paola Valbonesi, Marco Capolupo, Marco Capolupo, Alessandro G. Rombolà, Alessandro G. Rombolà, Paola Valbonesi, Daniele Fabbri Daniele Fabbri Elena Fabbri, Paola Valbonesi, Sadia Sharmin, Paola Valbonesi, Paola Valbonesi, Paola Valbonesi, Paola Valbonesi, Paola Valbonesi, Paola Valbonesi, Paola Valbonesi, Paola Valbonesi, Daniele Fabbri Paola Valbonesi, Alessandro G. Rombolà, Elena Fabbri, Elena Fabbri, Elena Fabbri, Elena Fabbri, Elena Fabbri, Elena Fabbri, Paola Valbonesi, Paola Valbonesi, Daniele Fabbri Daniele Fabbri Elena Fabbri, Elena Fabbri, Elena Fabbri, Marco Capolupo, Daniele Fabbri Daniele Fabbri Elena Fabbri, Daniele Fabbri Daniele Fabbri

Summary

Polystyrene microplastics loaded with chrysene were found to impair early larval development and alter physiological markers in Mediterranean mussels, with chrysene-loaded MPs causing greater harm than clean MPs, demonstrating that sorbed polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons compound the toxicity of ingested particles.

The sorption of organic pollutants to marine plastic litter may pose risks to marine organisms, notably for what concerns their intake and transfer through microplastic (MP) ingestion. This study investigated the effects of polystyrene MP loaded with chrysene (CHR) on early-stage and physiological endpoints measured in the Mediterranean mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis. The same concentrations of virgin microplastics (MP) and MP loaded with 10.8 µg CHR/mg (CHR-MP) were administered to mussel gametes/embryos (25 × 103 items/mL) and adults (5⋅× 103 items/L); further treatments included 0.1 mg/L of freely dissolved CHR and a second CHR concentration corresponding to that vehiculated by CHR-MP during exposure (3.78 µg/L and 0.73 ng/L for gamete/embryos and adults, respectively). None of the treatments affected gamete fertilization, while 0.1 mg/L CHR induced embryotoxicity. In adults, CHR-MP and MP similarly affected lysosomal membrane stability and neutral lipids and induced slight effects on oxidative stress endpoints. CHR affected tested endpoints only at 0.1 mg/L, with lysosomal, oxidative stress and neurotoxicity biomarkers generally showing greater alterations than those induced by CHR-MP and MP. This study shows that the CHR sorption on MP does not alter the impact of virgin MP on mussels and may pose limited risks compared to other routes of exposure.

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