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. Human Health Effects Nanoplastics Sign in to save

Toxicity of polystyrene nanoplastics and zinc oxide to mice

Chemosphere 2020 117 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Fernanda Neves Estrela, Abraão Tiago Batista Guimarães, Amanda Pereira da Costa Araújo, Fabiano Guimarães Silva, Thiarlen Marinho da Luz, Abner Marcelino Silva, Paulo Sérgio Pereira, Guilherme Malafaia

Summary

Mice injected intraperitoneally with environmentally relevant doses of ZnO nanoparticles or polystyrene nanoplastics showed cognitive impairment in recognition tests, while combined exposure produced genotoxic effects and biochemical stress markers, indicating neurotoxic and genotoxic potential.

Polymers
Models

The toxicity of zinc oxide (ZnO NPs) and polystyrene nanoplastics (PS NaPs) has been tested in different animal models; however, knowledge about their impact on mice remains incipient. The aim of the current study is to evaluate the effects of these nanomaterials on Swiss mice after their individual exposure to a binary combination of them. The goal was to investigate whether short exposure (three days) to an environmentally relevant dose (14.6 ng/kg, i.p.) of these pollutants would have neurotoxic, biochemical and genotoxic effects on the modelss. Data in the current study have shown that the individual exposure of these animals has led to cognitive impairment based on the object recognition test, although the exposure experiment did not cause locomotor and anxiogenic or anxiolitic-like behavioral changes in them. This outcome was associated with increased nitric oxide levels, thiobarbituric acid reactive species, reduction in acetylcholinesterase activity and with the accumulation of nanomaterials in their brains. Results recorded for the assessed parameters did not differ between the control group and the groups exposed to the binary combination of pollutants. However, both the individual and the combined exposures caused erythrocyte DNA damages associated with hypercholesterolemic and hypertriglyceridemic conditions due to the presence of nanomaterials. Based on the results, the toxicological potential of ZnO NPs and PS NaPs in the models was confirmed and it encouraged further in-depth investigations about factors explaining the lack of additive or synergistic effect caused by the combined exposure to the assessed pollutants.

Share this paper