We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Combined hepatotoxicity of imidacloprid and microplastics in adult zebrafish: Endpoints at gene transcription
Summary
Researchers investigated the combined liver toxicity of the pesticide imidacloprid and polystyrene microplastics in adult zebrafish over 21 days. The combination caused greater changes in gene expression related to fat and sugar metabolism and inflammatory responses than either contaminant alone. The study suggests that even low concentrations of microplastics and pesticides together may produce more severe hepatotoxic effects than individual exposures.
Microplastics (MPs) and pesticides are two kinds of ubiquitous pollutants that can pose a health risk to aquatic organisms. However, researches about the combined effects of MPs and pesticides are very limited. A simple combined exposure model was established in this study, adult zebrafish were exposed to 100 μg/L imidacloprid (IMI), 20 μg/L polystyrene microplastics (PS), and a combination of PS and IMI (PS + IMI) for 21 days. The results demonstrated that exposure to PS and IMI inhibited the growth of zebrafish and altered the levels of glycolipid metabolism and oxidative stress-related biochemical parameters. While gene expression analysis revealed that, compared with PS or IMI treatment group, combined exposure caused a greater change in gene expression levels involving the process of glycolipid metabolism (Gk, Hk1, Aco, PPar-α, Cpt1, Acc, Fas, PPar-γ, Apo) and inflammatory response (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α, IL-10). The results demonstrated that even combined exposure of low concentrations of PS and IMI could cause more severe hepatotoxicity in zebrafish, especially in terms of gene transcription. And more combined toxicity studies are essential for MPs and pesticides risk assessment.
Sign in to start a discussion.