0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Sign in to save

Polystyrene microplastics reduce abundance of developing B cells in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) primary cultures

Fish & Shellfish Immunology 2021 52 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Robert C. Hale, Robert C. Hale, Robert C. Hale, Meredith Evans Seeley Meredith Evans Seeley Meredith Evans Seeley Patty Zwollo, Robert C. Hale, Robert C. Hale, Meredith Evans Seeley Meredith Evans Seeley Meredith Evans Seeley Robert C. Hale, Robert C. Hale, Robert C. Hale, Robert C. Hale, Robert C. Hale, Robert C. Hale, Robert C. Hale, Meredith Evans Seeley Meredith Evans Seeley Meredith Evans Seeley Robert C. Hale, Fatima Quddos, Carey K. Bagdassarian, Patty Zwollo, Robert C. Hale, Carey K. Bagdassarian, Robert C. Hale, Robert C. Hale, Meredith Evans Seeley Robert C. Hale, Robert C. Hale, Robert C. Hale, Meredith Evans Seeley Meredith Evans Seeley Robert C. Hale, Robert C. Hale, Meredith Evans Seeley Lauren A. Abderhalden, Meredith Evans Seeley Robert C. Hale, Meredith Evans Seeley

Summary

Researchers found that polystyrene microplastics reduced the abundance of developing B cells in rainbow trout immune cell cultures. Trout phagocytic B cells efficiently took up small microplastic particles, and exposure led to decreased expression of key immune genes involved in antibody production. The findings suggest that chronic microplastic exposure could potentially compromise the adaptive immune response in fish.

Polymers
Body Systems
Study Type In vivo

Environmental microplastic pollution (including polystyrene, PS) may have detrimental effects on the health of aquatic organisms. Accumulation of PS microplastics has been reported to affect innate immune cells and inflammatory responses in fish. To date, knowledge on effects of microplastics on the antibody response is still very limited. Here, we investigated effects of small (0.8-20 μm) PS microplastics on the abundance of B lineage cells in primary cultures of developing immune cells from the anterior kidney of rainbow trout. Both purchased PS microbeads and PS microparticles generated from consumer products were used as microplastic sources. We first show that rainbow trout phagocytic B cells efficiently took up small (0.83-3.1 μm) PS microbeads within hours of exposure. In addition, our data revealed that PS microplastic exposure most significantly decreased the abundance of a population of non-phagocytic developing B cells, using both flow cytometry and RT-qPCR. PS microplastics-induced loss of developing B cells further correlated with reduced gene expression of RAG1 and the membrane form of immunoglobulin heavy chains mu and tau. Based on the induced loss of developing B cells observed in our in vitro studies, we speculate that in vivo, chronic PS microplastic-exposure may lead to suboptimal IgM/IgT levels in response to pathogens in teleost species. Considering the highly conserved nature of vertebrate B lymphopoiesis it is likely that PS microplastics will similarly reduce antibody responses in higher vertebrate species, including humans. Further, RAG1 provides an effective biomarker to determine effects of PS microplastics on B cell development in teleost species.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper