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In vitro toxicity from a physical perspective of polyethylene microplastics based on statistical curvature change analysis

The Science of The Total Environment 2020 182 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Daheui Choi, Jangsun Hwang, Junah Bang, Seora Han, Tae Ho Kim, Yoogyeong Oh, Youngdeok Hwang, Jonghoon Choi, Jinkee Hong

Summary

Researchers investigated the in vitro toxicity of polyethylene microplastics of two different shapes using statistical analysis of particle curvature. They found that irregularly shaped microplastic fragments caused greater cellular damage than more uniformly shaped particles, suggesting that physical characteristics beyond size influence toxicity. The study demonstrates that the sharp edges and irregular surfaces of environmentally degraded microplastics may contribute to their harmful biological effects.

Polymers
Body Systems
Study Type In vitro

Microplastics which are gradually and randomly decompose into small fragment by exposure of physical and biological external stress are emerging as a significant threat to the all the environments. Here, we have demonstrated the in vitro toxicity of microplastics of two different shapes. To minimize the chemical effect, polyethylene (PE), was used. PE microplastics with two different shapes were prepared, high-density PE microbeads and irregularly ground low-density PE from bulk pellets. It is hypothesized that morphological characteristics and concentration of PE microplastics could affect cellular viability, immunity, and lysis. To quantify the randomness of the microplastic shape, the edge patterns of the generated PE microplastics were converted into numerical values and analyzed using a statistical method. A 10-fold difference in curvature value was observed between microbeads and ground microfragments. To correlate shape differences to toxicology, cells were exposed to PE microplastics on the demand of toxicology studies. We found that the higher concentration and rough structure were associated with the toxicity of plastics toward cells, pro-inflammatory cytokine release, and hemolysis, even though PE is buoyant onto medium. The PE microbeads did not exhibit severe cytotoxicity at any of the tested concentrations, but induced immune and hemolysis responses at high concentrations. When comparing the toxicity of different shapes of PE microplastics, we confirmed by statistical analysis that irregular-shape plastics with sharp edges and higher curvature differences may adversely affect cells, further having possibility to human toxicity in real environment.

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