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Adsorption of bio-organic eco-corona molecules reduces the toxic response to metallic nanoparticles in Daphnia magna

Scientific Reports 2021 31 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Mikael T. Ekvall, Mikael T. Ekvall, Mikael T. Ekvall, Mikael T. Ekvall, Mikael T. Ekvall, Mikael T. Ekvall, Mikael T. Ekvall, Mikael T. Ekvall, Tommy Cedervall Tommy Cedervall Jonas Hedberg, Mikael T. Ekvall, Jonas Hedberg, Mikael T. Ekvall, Lars‐Anders Hansson, Tommy Cedervall Mikael T. Ekvall, Anders Malmendal, Lars‐Anders Hansson, Tommy Cedervall Tommy Cedervall Inger Odnevall Wallinder, Anders Malmendal, Mikael T. Ekvall, Mikael T. Ekvall, Tommy Cedervall Mikael T. Ekvall, Tommy Cedervall Lars‐Anders Hansson, Anders Malmendal, Lars‐Anders Hansson, Lars‐Anders Hansson, Lars‐Anders Hansson, Lars‐Anders Hansson, Tommy Cedervall Tommy Cedervall Tommy Cedervall Tommy Cedervall Mikael T. Ekvall, Lars‐Anders Hansson, Tommy Cedervall Tommy Cedervall Tommy Cedervall Tommy Cedervall Tommy Cedervall Tommy Cedervall Tommy Cedervall Lars‐Anders Hansson, Tommy Cedervall Tommy Cedervall

Summary

Researchers coated metallic nanoparticles with bio-organic eco-corona molecules extracted from natural waters and tested toxicity to Daphnia magna, finding that the natural corona substantially reduced acute toxicity, suggesting that laboratory toxicity tests with clean nanoparticles may overestimate environmental risk.

Models

As the use of engineered nanomaterials increases, so does the risk of them spreading to natural ecosystems. Hitherto, knowledge regarding the toxic properties of nanoparticles (NP's) and their potential interactions with natural bio-organic molecules adsorbed to them, and thereby forming surface coronas, is limited. However, we show here that the toxic effect of NPs of tungsten carbide cobalt (WC-Co) and cobalt (Co) on the crustacean Daphnia magna is postponed in the presence of natural biological degradation products (eco-corona biomolecules). For Daphnia exposed to WC-Co NPs the survival time increased with 20-25% and for Co NPs with 30-47% after mixing the particles with a solution of eco-corona biomolecules before exposure. This suggests that an eco-corona, composed of biomolecules always present in natural ecosystems, reduces the toxic potency of both studied NPs. Further, the eco-coronas did not affect the particle uptake, suggesting that the reduction in toxicity was related to the particle-organism interaction after eco-corona formation. In a broader context, this implies that although the increasing use and production of NPs may constitute a novel, global environmental threat, the acute toxicity and long-term effects of some NPs will, at least under certain conditions, be reduced as they enter natural ecosystems.

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