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Impact of polypropylene microplastics and chemical pollutants on European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) gut microbiota and health

The Science of The Total Environment 2021 119 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.
Jorge Rapp, Jorge Rapp, Daniel Montero, Jorge Rapp, Jorge Rapp, Alicia Herrera Jorge Rapp, Jorge Rapp, Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Simona Rimoldi, Simona Rimoldi, May Gómez, May Gómez, Alicia Herrera May Gómez, Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, Alicia Herrera May Gómez, Jorge Rapp, Jorge Rapp, Daniel Montero, Simona Rimoldi, Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera May Gómez, May Gómez, Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera May Gómez, Jorge Rapp, Jorge Rapp, Jorge Rapp, May Gómez, Silvia Torrecillas, Jorge Rapp, May Gómez, Genciana Terova, Alicia Herrera May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, Alicia Herrera Simona Rimoldi, Daniel Montero, Jorge Rapp, Jorge Rapp, Jorge Rapp, Jorge Rapp, May Gómez, May Gómez, Jorge Rapp, Jorge Rapp, Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera May Gómez, Jorge Rapp, Jorge Rapp, Jorge Rapp, May Gómez, Alicia Herrera Federico Moroni, May Gómez, Jorge Rapp, Jorge Rapp, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, Alicia Herrera May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera May Gómez, Alicia Herrera May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, Alicia Herrera May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, Genciana Terova, Genciana Terova, May Gómez, Alicia Herrera Federico Moroni, Álvaro Fernández-Montero, Federico Moroni, May Gómez, Daniel Montero, Daniel Montero, Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Federico Moroni, Daniel Montero, May Gómez, Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera May Gómez, May Gómez, Alicia Herrera May Gómez, Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera Alicia Herrera May Gómez, May Gómez, May Gómez, Genciana Terova, May Gómez, Silvia Torrecillas, May Gómez, May Gómez, Alicia Herrera

Summary

Researchers investigated how polypropylene microplastics, alone and combined with chemical pollutants, affect the gut health and microbiome of European sea bass. They found that microplastic ingestion altered the gut microbial community composition and that combined exposure with pollutants amplified the harmful effects. The study suggests that microplastics may serve as carriers for toxic chemicals, compounding their impact on fish health and potentially affecting seafood safety.

Polymers

Plastic pollution has become a global problem for marine ecosystems. Microplastics (MPs) are consumed by several marine organisms, including benthic and pelagic fish species that confuse them with food sources, thus contributing to bioaccumulation along the food chain. In addition to structural intestinal damage, ingestion of MPs represents a pathway for fish exposure to potentially hazardous chemicals, too. Most of them are endocrine disrupters, genotoxic or induce immune depression in fish. Accordingly, we assessed the combined toxicological effects of microplastics (MPs) and adsorbed pollutants by adding them to marine fish diet. European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) juveniles were fed for 60 days with feeds containing polypropylene MPs, either virgin or contaminated with chemical pollutants (a blend of dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene, chlorpyrifos, and benzophenone-3). The data demonstrated a synergic action of MPs and chemical pollutants to induce an inflammatory-like response in distal intestine of sea bass as shown by the up regulation of cytokine il-6 and tnf-α expression. Morphological analysis detected the presence of a focus of lymphocytes in anterior and posterior intestinal segments of fish fed with contaminants in the diet. With regard to microbiota, significant changes in bacterial species richness, beta diversity, and composition of gut microbiota were observed as a consequence of both pollutants and polluted MPs ingestion. These perturbations in gut microbial communities, including the reduction of beneficial lactic acid bacteria and the increase in potential pathogenic microorganism (Proteobacteria and Vibrionales), were undeniable signs of intestinal dysbiosis, which in turn confirmed the signs of inflammation caused by pollutants, especially when combined with MPs. The results obtained in this study provide, therefore, new insights into the potential risks of ingesting MPs as pollutant carriers in marine fish.

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