Effects of Leachates from UV-Weathered Microplastic in Cell-Based Bioassays
Environmental Science & Technology2019
139 citations
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Christoph Rummel,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Christoph Rummel,
Christoph Rummel,
Christoph Rummel,
Christoph Rummel,
Christoph Rummel,
Christoph Rummel,
Beate I. Escher,
Beate I. Escher,
Beate I. Escher,
Merle Plassmann,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Matthew MacLeod,
Christoph Rummel,
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Beate I. Escher,
Beate I. Escher,
Christoph Rummel,
Merle Plassmann,
Merle Plassmann,
Merle Plassmann,
Matthew MacLeod,
Christoph Rummel,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Matthew MacLeod,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Matthew MacLeod,
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Matthew MacLeod,
Beate I. Escher,
Matthew MacLeod,
Matthew MacLeod,
Oskar Sandblom,
Oskar Sandblom,
Oskar Sandblom,
Oskar Sandblom,
Merle Plassmann,
Merle Plassmann,
Merle Plassmann,
Merle Plassmann,
Merle Plassmann,
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Matthew MacLeod,
Matthew MacLeod,
Matthew MacLeod,
Matthew MacLeod,
Christoph Rummel,
Christoph Rummel,
Christoph Rummel,
Merle Plassmann,
Merle Plassmann,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Merle Plassmann,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Matthew MacLeod,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Matthew MacLeod,
Beate I. Escher,
Beate I. Escher,
Matthew MacLeod,
Christoph Rummel,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Merle Plassmann,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Christoph Rummel,
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Beate I. Escher,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Matthew MacLeod,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Summary
Chemicals were leached from UV-weathered polyethylene, PET, polypropylene, and polystyrene into artificial seawater, concentrated, and tested in cell-based bioassays for cytotoxicity, AhR/PPARγ activation, estrogenic activity, and other endpoints. UV weathering significantly increased the leaching of bioactive compounds, demonstrating that aged microplastics release more toxic chemicals than pristine plastics.
Standard ecotoxicological testing of microplastic does not provide insight into the influence that environmental weathering by, e.g., UV light has on related effects. In this study, we leached chemicals from plastic into artificial seawater during simulated UV-induced weathering. We tested largely additive-free preproduction polyethylene, polyethylene terephthalate, polypropylene, and polystyrene and two types of plastic obtained from electronic equipment as positive controls. Leachates were concentrated by solid-phase extraction and dosed into cell-based bioassays that cover (i) cytotoxicity; (ii) activation of metabolic enzymes via binding to the arylhydrocarbon receptor (AhR) and the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPARγ); (iii) specific, receptor-mediated effects (estrogenicity, ERα); and (iv) adaptive response to oxidative stress (AREc32). LC-HRMS analysis was used to identify possible chain-scission products of polymer degradation, which were then tested in AREc32 and PPARγ. Explicit activation of all assays by the positive controls provided proof-of-concept of the experimental setup to demonstrate effects of chemicals liberated during weathering. All plastic leachates activated the oxidative stress response, in most cases with increased induction by UV-treated samples compared to dark controls. For PPARγ, polyethylene-specific effects were partially explained by the detected dicarboxylic acids. Since the preproduction plastic showed low effects often in the range of the blanks future studies should investigate implications of weathering on end consumer products containing additives.