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Size-dependent transgenerational toxicity induced by nanoplastics in nematode Caenorhabditis elegans

The Science of The Total Environment 2021 107 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.
Shuting Wang, Huanliang Liu, Huanliang Liu, Huanliang Liu, Huanliang Liu, Huanliang Liu, Huanliang Liu, Huanliang Liu, Shuting Wang, Shuting Wang, Lijie Tian, Lijie Tian, Dayong Wang Shuting Wang, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Huanliang Liu, Dayong Wang Lijie Tian, Lijie Tian, Huanliang Liu, Huanliang Liu, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Shuting Wang, Shuting Wang, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Huanliang Liu, Huanliang Liu, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Huanliang Liu, Shuting Wang, Dayong Wang Shuting Wang, Huanliang Liu, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Huanliang Liu, Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang Dayong Wang

Summary

Researchers discovered that nanoplastic exposure in nematode worms caused toxic effects that persisted across multiple generations, even when offspring were raised in clean conditions. Smaller nanoplastics (20 nm) produced more severe and longer-lasting transgenerational effects than larger ones (100 nm), with toxicity detectable through the sixth generation. The study suggests that nanoplastic size is a critical factor in determining long-term biological impacts that can be passed down to future generations.

Polymers
Body Systems

Nanoplastic exposure can potentially cause the severe transgenerational toxicity in organisms. However, the transgenerational nanoplastic toxicity and the underlying mechanisms are still largely unclear. Using Caenorhabditis elegans as an animal model, we here compared the transgenerational toxicity of two sizes of polystyrene nanoparticles (PS-NPs, 20 and 100 nm). The nematodes were exposed to PS-NPs at the P0 generation, and from the F1 generation the nematodes were grown under the normal condition. Exposure to 20 nm PS-NPs resulted in more severe transgenerational toxicity than exposure to 100 nm PS-NPs. At the concentration of 100 μg/L, the toxicity of 20 nm PS-NPs on locomotion and reproduction was detected at the F1-F6 generations, whereas the toxicity of 100 nm PS-NPs could only be observed at the F1-F3 generations. The difference in transgeneration toxicity between PS-NPs (20 nm) and PS-NPs (100 nm) was associated with the difference in transgenerational activation of oxidative stress. Based on observations on SOD-3::GFP, HSP-6::GFP, and HSP-4::GFP expressions, PS-NPs (20 nm) and PS-NPs (100 nm) further induced different transgenerational responses of anti-oxidation, mt UPR, and ER UPR. Our data suggested that the induction of transgenerational toxicity of PS-NPs was size dependent in nematodes. The results are helpful for our understanding the cellular mechanisms for the induction of transgenerational nanoplastic toxicity in organisms.

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