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Microplastic-induced damage in early embryonal development of sea urchin Sphaerechinus granularis

Environmental Research 2019 102 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.
Petra Burić, Philippe J. Thomas, Philippe J. Thomas, Giovanni Pagano, Dijana Pavičić-Hamer, Dijana Pavičić-Hamer, Daniel Mark Lyons, Ines Kovačić, Petra Burić, Ines Kovačić, Marco Trifuoggi, Rahime Oral, Ines Kovačić, Rahime Oral, Ines Kovačić, Antonietta Siciliano, Rahime Oral, Petra Burić, Giovanni Pagano, Antonietta Siciliano, Marco Trifuoggi, Marco Trifuoggi, Marco Trifuoggi, Antonietta Siciliano, Maria Toscanesi, Ines Kovačić, Giovanni Pagano, Antonietta Siciliano, Rahime Oral, Giovanni Pagano, Ines Kovačić, Marco Trifuoggi, Maria Toscanesi, Dijana Pavičić-Hamer, Petra Burić, Marco Trifuoggi, Petra Burić, Rahime Oral, Antonietta Siciliano, Antonietta Siciliano, Marco Trifuoggi, Marco Trifuoggi, Marco Trifuoggi, Maria Toscanesi, Marco Guida Petra Burić, Petra Burić, Petra Burić, Rahime Oral, Rahime Oral, Daniel Mark Lyons, Daniel Mark Lyons, Daniel Mark Lyons, Dijana Pavičić-Hamer, Giovanni Pagano, Giovanni Pagano, Petra Burić, Marco Trifuoggi, Ines Kovačić, Marco Guida Petra Burić, Marco Trifuoggi, Marco Guida Daniel Mark Lyons, Antonietta Siciliano, Antonietta Siciliano, Marco Trifuoggi, Marco Guida Ines Kovačić, Daniel Mark Lyons, Marco Trifuoggi, Maria Toscanesi, Daniel Mark Lyons, Daniel Mark Lyons, Marco Guida Marco Trifuoggi, Maria Toscanesi, Petra Burić, Philippe J. Thomas, Marco Trifuoggi, Daniel Mark Lyons, Marco Guida Luigi Paduano, Marco Guida Maria Toscanesi, Antonietta Siciliano, Marco Guida Marco Guida Daniel Mark Lyons, Marco Guida

Summary

Polystyrene and PMMA microplastics of various sizes were tested on sea urchin embryos from fertilization to the pluteus larval stage, causing dose-dependent developmental defects, cytogenetic abnormalities, and mitotic disruption, with sperm exposure to both plastic types also producing transmissible damage to offspring. The findings reveal significant developmental, genotoxic, and multigenerational hazards from microplastic exposure in marine invertebrates.

Polymers
Body Systems

Two microplastic sets, polystyrene (PS) and polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), were tested for adverse effects on early life stages of Sphaerechinus granularis sea urchins. Microparticulate PS (10, 80 and 230 μm diameter) and PMMA (10 and 50 μm diameter) were tested on developing S. granularis embryos from 10 min post-fertilisation (p-f) to the pluteus larval stage (72 h p-f), at concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 5 mg L. Both PS and PMMA exposures resulted in significant concentration-related increase of developmental defects and of microplastic uptake in plutei. Moreover, embryo exposures to PS and PMMA (5 and 50 mg L) from 10 min to 5 h p-f resulted in a significant increase of cytogenetic abnormalities, expressed as significantly increased mitotic aberrations, while mitotoxicity (as % embryos lacking active mitoses) was observed in embryos exposed to PS, though not to PMMA. When S. granularis sperm suspensions were exposed for 10 min to PS or to PMMA (0.1-5 mg L), a significant decrease of fertilisation success was observed following sperm exposure to 0.1 mg L PS, though not to higher PS concentrations nor to PMMA. Sperm pretreatment, however, resulted in significant offspring damage, as excess developmental defects in plutei, both following sperm exposure to PS and PMMA, thus suggesting transmissible damage from sperm pronuclei to the offspring. The overall results point to relevant developmental, cytogenetic and genotoxic effects of PS and PMMA microplastics to S. granularis early life stages, warranting further investigations of other microplastics and other target biota.

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