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Microplastic exposure reshapes the virome and virus–bacteria networks with implications for immune regulation in Mytilus coruscus

Marine Pollution Bulletin 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 53 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Hong Ma, Jingyan Zhang, Xiaoya Wang, Xiangli Dong, Bin Li, Xiaoya Wang, Xiangli Dong, Yingying Ye, Yingying Ye, Xiaoya Wang, Qingyang Li, Bin Li, Jingyan Zhang, Yingying Ye, Bin Li, Xiangli Dong, Hongfei Li Hong Ma, Yingying Ye, Yingying Ye, Hongfei Li Shijie Wang, Yingying Ye, Yingying Ye, Yingying Ye, Yingying Ye, Hongfei Li Qianwen Ying, Hong Ma, Qianwen Ying, Hongfei Li Mikhail Shilin, Hongfei Li Suzhen Ran, Xiangli Dong, Suzhen Ran, E. O. Leonteva, E. O. Leonteva, Yingying Ye, E. O. Leonteva, E. O. Leonteva, Yingying Ye, Mikhail Shilin, Yingying Ye, Xiangli Dong, Hongfei Li

Summary

Researchers exposed mussels to microplastics for seven days and analyzed how the pollution affected viral communities in their tissues. They found that microplastic exposure suppressed DNA virus diversity while activating RNA viral metabolism, and restructured interactions between bacteria-infecting viruses and opportunistic pathogens. The study suggests that microplastics may influence immune function in shellfish by reshaping the viral community and virus-mediated immune interactions.

Body Systems

Microplastic pollution has emerged as a critical environmental concern, yet its impacts on host-associated viral communities and immune balance in marine bivalves remain largely unexplored. In this study, Mytilus coruscus individuals were exposed to microplastics in situ for seven days. Virome sequencing and bioinformatic analyses revealed that microplastic exposure induced divergent responses in DNA and RNA viral communities. DNA viromes exhibited suppressed diversity and downregulation of core viral metabolic pathways, potentially reflecting reduced viral replication capacity under host immune stress. In contrast, RNA viromes displayed metabolic activation and functional shifts, including enriched glycan and nucleotide metabolism, possibly linked to enhanced viral activity or immune evasion. Phage-bacteria interaction networks were also restructured, showing increased associations with opportunistic pathogens such as Vibrio cholerae and Enterobacter, potentially affecting immune surveillance. Furthermore, the expression of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in viral genomes was differentially regulated, suggesting pollutant-induced microbial selection that may challenge host immune resilience. These findings suggest that microplastics not only reshape virome composition and metabolic functions but also influence virus-mediated immune interactions, with important implications for disease susceptibility and immune homeostasis in filter-feeding shellfish.

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