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Protein corona-mediated transport of nanoplastics in seawater-saturated porous media

Water Research 2020 122 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Wenhui Han, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuanzhang Hou, Wenhui Han, Yuanzhang Hou, Zhiqiang Dong, Zhiqiang Dong, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuanzhang Hou, Zhiqiang Dong, Yuanzhang Hou, Wenhui Han, Zhiqiang Dong, Wenhui Han, Zhiqiang Dong, Yuanzhang Hou, Zhiqiang Dong, Yuping Qiu Yuanzhang Hou, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuanzhang Hou, Zhiqiang Dong, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuping Qiu Wenhui Han, Wenhui Han, Yuping Qiu Mengping Liu, Yuping Qiu Yuping Qiu Yuanzhang Hou, Zhiqiang Dong, Mengping Liu, Yuanzhang Hou, Yuping Qiu Yuping Qiu Yuping Qiu Junliang Wang, Yuping Qiu Junliang Wang, Yuping Qiu Yuping Qiu Zhiqiang Dong, Yuping Qiu Zhiqiang Dong, Zhiqiang Dong, Zhiqiang Dong, Yuping Qiu Yuping Qiu Yuping Qiu Yuping Qiu Yuping Qiu Yuping Qiu Junliang Wang, Yuping Qiu

Summary

Protein coatings on polystyrene nanoplastics in seawater-saturated sand dramatically altered their transport behavior: negatively charged albumin coatings enhanced transport of smaller particles while positively charged lysozyme triggered aggregation and retention of the smallest particles. The results show that protein coronas in aquatic systems can either accelerate or limit nanoplastic migration in porous environments.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

The offshore aquaculture environment is a potential water area with high concentrations of tiny plastics and feeding proteins. In this study, the negatively charged bovine serum albumin (BSA) and the positively charged lysozyme (LSZ) were used to explore the effects of protein corona on the aggregation, transport, and retention of polystyrene nanoplastics (NPs; 200, 500, and 1000 nm) in sea sand saturated with seawater of 35 practical salinity units (PSU). The BSA corona, which was formed by the adsorption of BSA on the surface of NPs, drove the dispersion of NPs (200 and 500 nm) due dominantly to the induced colloidal steric hindrance. For example, the aggregate sizes of 500 nm NP decreased from 1740 ± 87 nm to 765 ± 8 nm at 40 min, which resulted in the enhanced transportation of NP. The calculated interaction energies indicated the BSA corona-induced high energy barriers (>10 KT) between 1000 nm NPs and sand surface, demonstrating the BSA-enhanced transport of 1000 nm NPs. The mass percentage recovered from the effluent (M) increased from 33.4% to 61.7%. Inversely, the LSZ corona triggered the aggregation of 200 nm NPs into the large aggregates via electrostatic adsorption and bridging effect, thereby inhibiting the transport of 200 nm NPs. Nevertheless, no LSZ corona was formed on the surface of 500 and 1000 nm NPs due to extremely low protein adsorption. Accordingly, LSZ cannot affect the stability and transport of these NPs. In the diluted seawater (3.5 PSU), the strong electrostatic attraction between positively charged LSZ and 500 nm NPs significantly increased and the LSZ corona formed, which induced the aggregation of 500 nm NPs. The M of NPs therefore decreased from 53.1% to 11.2%. Overall, the protein corona-mediated transport of NPs in seawater-saturated porous media depends on protein type, NP size, and seawater salinity.

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