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Mechanism underlying the toxicity of the microplastic fibre transfer in the sea cucumber Apostichopus japonicus

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2021 33 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.
Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Da Huo, Lina Sun, Chenggang Lin, Chenggang Lin, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Chenggang Lin, Chenggang Lin, Chenggang Lin, Mohamed Mohsen, Lina Sun, Chenggang Lin, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Lina Sun, Hongsheng Yang Chenggang Lin, Da Huo, Mohamed Mohsen, Chenggang Lin, Lina Sun, Mohamed Mohsen, Hongsheng Yang Mohamed Mohsen, Chenggang Lin, Chenggang Lin, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, Hongsheng Yang Chenggang Lin, Hongsheng Yang

Summary

Researchers investigated how microplastic fibers enter and move through sea cucumbers (Apostichopus japonicus), finding that fibers ingested via the respiratory tree entered the coelomic fluid and triggered immune cell responses, and that fiber characteristics — particularly length — determined the severity of tissue damage.

Body Systems

Microscopic plastic particles (0.1 µm-5 mm) are widespread hazardous pollutants, and microfibres (MFs) are their dominant shape in habitats. Previous field and laboratory studies have demonstrated that MFs enter the coelomic fluid of sea cucumbers from the water through the respiratory tree. However, the possible mechanism underlying the toxicity of this process is not well understood. Herein, RNA-Seq was used to examine the responses of the respiratory tree during the MF transfer process in the sea cucumber Apostichopus japonicus. Polyester synthetic MFs were used, and the number of transferred MFs was controlled to the amount reported from the field. The results showed that the MFs altered gene expression as the transfer process increased. The top genes regulated by MF transfer were mainly related to metabolic processes and signal transduction pathways, with upregulated genes following low MF transfer and downregulated genes following high MF transfer. Functional enrichment analysis revealed the pathways in which differentially expressed genes were enriched under different MF transfer scenarios. The transcriptomic findings were further supported by histological observations, which revealed injury and loss of cell components. This study contributes to understanding the effects of MFs in a valuable echinoderm species through transcriptomic and histological examinations.

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