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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. Detection Methods Nanoplastics Sign in to save

Interactions between polystyrene nanoparticles and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii monitored by infrared spectroscopy combined with molecular biology

Environmental Pollution 2020 16 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Maureen Déniel, Maureen Déniel, Maureen Déniel, Maureen Déniel, Maureen Déniel, Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Nicolas Errien, Maureen Déniel, Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Aurore Caruso, Nicolas Errien, Marie Zanella, Fabienne Lagarde Marie Zanella, Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Aurore Caruso, Nicolas Errien, Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Nicolas Errien, Marie Zanella, Aurore Caruso, Marie Zanella, Aurore Caruso, Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Aurore Caruso, Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Aurore Caruso, Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde Fabienne Lagarde

Summary

Researchers used infrared spectroscopy combined with gene expression analysis to monitor how freshwater microalgae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii respond to polystyrene nanoparticles, finding biochemical changes in carbohydrate composition similar to nitrogen stress — suggesting nanoplastics trigger environmental stress-response pathways in algae.

For several decades, use of nanoparticles (NP) on a global scale has been generating new potential sources of organism disruption. Recent studies have shown that NP can cause modifications on the biochemical macromolecular composition of microalgae and raised questions on the toxicity of plastic particles, which are widespread in the aquatic environment. Polystyrene (PS) particles are among the most widely used plastics in the world. In our experimentation, a combined approach of infrared spectroscopy and molecular biology (real-time PCR) has been applied in order to better apprehend the consequences of interactions between Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, freshwater microalgae and PS NP. Two references have been used, nitrogen deprivation -a well-documented stressor-, and gold nanoparticles (Au-NP). As regards biochemical composition, our experiments show a differing microalga response, according to the NP to which they have been exposed. Results with infrared spectroscopy and gene expression methods are consistent and illustrate variation among several carbohydrates (galactose…). Furthermore, PS-NP seem to react in the same direction as nitrogen limitation, thereby supporting the hypothesis that PS-NP can induce response mechanisms to environmental changes in microalgae. This study highlighted the interest of combining infrared spectroscopy and gene expression as means of monitoring microalgae response to nanoplastics.

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