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How sea urchins face microplastics: Uptake, tissue distribution and immune system response

Environmental Pollution 2020 94 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Carola Murano, Carola Murano, Carola Murano, Carola Murano, Carola Murano, Ilaria Corsi Carola Murano, Ilaria Corsi Carola Murano, Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Raffaella Casotti, Carola Murano, Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Carola Murano, Claudio Agnisola, Anna Palumbo, Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Davide Caramiello, Carola Murano, Davide Caramiello, Claudio Agnisola, Raffaella Casotti, Ilaria Corsi Carola Murano, Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Raffaella Casotti, Raffaella Casotti, Ilaria Corsi Davide Caramiello, Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Immacolata Castellano, Anna Palumbo, Davide Caramiello, Ilaria Corsi Davide Caramiello, Davide Caramiello, Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Carola Murano, Davide Caramiello, Raffaella Casotti, Raffaella Casotti, Raffaella Casotti, Anna Palumbo, Davide Caramiello, Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Immacolata Castellano, Ilaria Corsi Carola Murano, Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Anna Palumbo, Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Anna Palumbo, Ilaria Corsi Anna Palumbo, Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Raffaella Casotti, Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi Ilaria Corsi

Summary

Sea urchins exposed to polystyrene microplastics showed particle uptake across multiple tissues (including coelom and gonads), dose-dependent changes in immune cell populations, and elevated oxidative stress, with smaller particles causing greater harm than larger ones.

Plastic pollution represents one of the major threats to the marine environment. A wide range of marine organisms has been shown to ingest microplastics due to their small dimensions (less than 1 mm). This negatively affects some biological processes, such as feeding, energy reserves and reproduction. Very few studies have been performed on the effect of microplastics on sea urchin development and virtually none on adults. The aim of this work was to evaluate the uptake and distribution of fluorescent labelled polystyrene microbeads (micro-PS) in the Mediterranean sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus and the potential impact on circulating immune cells. Differential uptake was observed in the digestive and water vascular systems as well as in the gonads based on microbeads size (10 and 45 μm in diameter). Treatment of sea urchins with particles of both sizes induced an increase of the total number of immune cells already after 24 h. No significant differences were observed among immune cell types. However, the ratio between red and white amoebocytes, indicative of sea urchin healthy status, increased with both particles. This effect was detectable already at 24 h upon exposure to smaller micro-PS (10 μm). An increase of intracellular levels of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species was observed at 24 h upon both micro-PS exposure, whereas at later time these levels became comparable to those of controls. A significant increase of total antioxidant capacity was observed after treatment with 10 μm micro-PS. Overall data provide the first evidence on polystyrene microbeads uptake and tissue distribution in sea urchins, indicating a stress-related impact on circulating immune cells.

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