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Metabolomics revealing the response of rice (Oryza sativa L.) exposed to polystyrene microplastics

Environmental Pollution 2020 265 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yao Liu, Yao Liu, Xiang Wu, Shijie Bian, Qiao Xiong, Qiao Xiong, Xiang Wu, Huijie Hou, Shanshan Yin, Yao Liu, Keke Xiao, Xiang Wu, Xiang Wu, Xiang Wu, Xiang Wu, Huijie Hou, Yao Liu, Xiang Wu, Shanshan Yin, Qiao Xiong, Yao Liu, Xiang Wu, Jiakuan Yang Keke Xiao, Shanshan Yin, Yao Liu, Qiao Xiong, Shijie Bian, Shijie Bian, Shanshan Yin, Sha Liang, Shijie Bian, Shanshan Yin, Sha Liang, Sha Liang, Sha Liang, Yao Liu, Xiang Wu, Huijie Hou, Xiang Wu, Sha Liang, Jingping Hu, Xiang Wu, Huijie Hou, Jingping Hu, Jiakuan Yang Keke Xiao, Jiakuan Yang Jiakuan Yang Jingping Hu, Jiakuan Yang Jiakuan Yang Jiakuan Yang

Summary

Researchers used metabolomics to investigate how polystyrene microplastics affect rice plants through both laboratory and field experiments. The study found that microplastic exposure reduced shoot biomass in a dose-dependent manner and altered antioxidant enzyme activity, suggesting that microplastics in agricultural soil can stress crops through measurable metabolic changes.

Polymers

Large amounts of microplastics accumulate in the agricultural soil. Microplastics would stress the crops but the underlying mechanism remains unclear. Herein, a laboratory exposure and field trials were carried out to investigate the response of rice (Oryza sativa L. II You. 900) to stress induced by polystyrene microplastics (PS-MPs) using a metabolomic approach. After laboratory exposure for 21 days, the decreases in shoot biomass of rice exposed to low, medium and high doses of PS-MPs were 13.1% (CV = 4.1%), 18.8% (CV = 3.7%), and 40.3% (CV = 9.2%), respectively, while the antioxidant enzymes showed an inverted upper-U shape when exposed to PS-MPs. A total of 24 samples from three exposure dose levels were included in the metabolic analysis. The metabolites of 12 amino acids, 16 saccharides, 26 organic acids and 17 others (lipids and polyols) in leaves decreased after the exposure to both 50 mg L and 250 mg L PS-MPs doses with hydroponically-cultured. The inhibition of perturbed biological pathway causes the biosynthesis of amino acids, nucleic acids, fatty acids and some secondary metabolites decreased which indicate that the energy expenditure exceeded the substance accumulation. In order to further validate the effects of PS-MPs on rice leaves obtained from the laboratory-scale experiments, a field-trial experiment was conducted. After 142 days of cultivation in farmland, the results with a maximum of 25.9% lower biomass in the crops exposed with PS-MPs. As such, the presence of PS-MPs may affect rice production by altering the metabolic systems of rice. Long-term exposure of PS-MPs to rice might be a potential risk to rice safety and quality.

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