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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. Human Health Effects Sign in to save

In vitro chemical and physical toxicities of polystyrene microfragments in human-derived cells

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2020 185 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.
Jinkee Hong Daheui Choi, Daheui Choi, Tae Ho Kim, Daheui Choi, Daheui Choi, Daheui Choi, Junah Bang, Daheui Choi, Junah Bang, Daheui Choi, Junah Bang, Junah Bang, Junah Bang, Junah Bang, Daheui Choi, Junah Bang, Tae Ho Kim, Tae Ho Kim, Junah Bang, Tae Ho Kim, Daheui Choi, Daheui Choi, Junah Bang, Junah Bang, Yoogyeong Oh, Yoogyeong Oh, Tae Ho Kim, Tae Ho Kim, Tae Ho Kim, Jinkee Hong Youngdeok Hwang, Youngdeok Hwang, Yoogyeong Oh, Yoogyeong Oh, Jinkee Hong Yoogyeong Oh, Youngdeok Hwang, Jinkee Hong Youngdeok Hwang, Youngdeok Hwang, Jinkee Hong

Summary

Researchers conducted in vitro toxicology testing on randomly-shaped polystyrene microfragments, which better represent real-world microplastics than the spherical microbeads commonly used in studies. The study found that irregular surface roughness contributed to physical cytotoxicity, and that chemical toxicity from leached additives also played a role, suggesting previous studies using uniform spheres may underestimate actual microplastic hazards.

Polymers
Study Type In vitro

With the increase in plastic production, a variety of toxicological studies on microplastics have been conducted as microplastics can be accumulated in the human body and cause unknown disease. However, previous studies have mainly assessed the toxicity of sphere-type microbeads, which may differ from randomly-shaped microplastics in a real environment. Here, we conducted in vitro toxicology analysis for randomly-shaped microplastics based on the hypotheses that (1) physical cytotoxicity is affected by nano-/micro-size roughness in polystyrene (PS) microfragments and (2) chemical toxicity is caused by chemical reagents from microplastics. We confirmed that the PS microfragments increased the acute inflammation of immune cells 20 times than control, the production of reactive oxygen species, and cell death of fibroblasts and cancer cells by releasing chemical reagents. In addition, when the PS microfragments were in direct contact with fibroblasts and red blood cells, the physical stress caused by them resulted in lactose dehydrogenase and hemoglobin release, respectively, due to cell membrane damage and hemolysis. This phenomenon was amplified when the concentration and roughness of the microfragments increased. Moreover, we quantitatively analyzed roughness differences between microplastics, which revealed a strong relationship between the physical damage of cells and the roughness of microplastics.

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