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Effects of polystyrene nanoparticles on the microbiota and functional diversity of enzymes in soil

Environmental Sciences Europe 2018 363 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
T. T. Awet, Yvonne Kohl, Florian Meier, Susanne Straskraba, Anna-Lena Grün, Thorsten Ruf, Carsten Jost, Roland Drexel, Erdihan Tunç, Christoph Emmerling

Summary

Polystyrene nanoparticles applied to soil at environmentally relevant concentrations caused significant reductions in microbial biomass and disrupted the activity of enzymes critical for nutrient cycling within 28 days. The study provides the first experimental evidence that nanoplastics can act as antimicrobial agents in soil, with potential consequences for soil fertility and ecosystem function.

Polymers

BACKGROUND: The increasing production of nanoplastics and the fragmentation of microplastics into smaller particles suggest a plausible yet unclear hazard in the natural environment, such as soil. We investigated the short-term effects (28 days) of polystyrene nanoparticles (PS-NPs) on the activity and biomass of soil microbiota, and the functional diversity of soil enzymes at environmental relevant low levels in an incubation experiment. RESULTS: Our results showed a significant decrease in microbial biomass in treatments of 100 and 1000 ng PS-NP g DM throughout the incubation period. Dehydrogenase activity and activities of enzymes involved in -(leucine-aminopeptidase), -(alkaline-phosphatase), and C-(β-glucosidase and cellobiohydrolase) cycles in the soil were significantly reduced at day 28 suggesting a broad and detrimental impact of PS-NPs on soil microbiota and enzymes. Leucine-aminopeptidase and alkaline-phosphatase activities tended to decrease consistently, while β-glucosidase and cellobiohydrolase activities increased at high concentrations (e.g., PS-NP-1000) in the beginning of the incubation period, e.g., at day 1. On the other hand, basal respiration and metabolic quotient increased with increasing PS-NP application rate throughout the incubation period possibly due to increased cell death that caused substrate-induced respiration (cryptic growth). CONCLUSIONS: We herewith demonstrated for the first time the potential antimicrobial activity of PS-NPs in soil, and this may serve as an important resource in environmental risk assessment of PS-NPs in the soil environment.

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