0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Reproductive & Development Sign in to save

Accumulation and Embryotoxicity of Polystyrene Nanoparticles at Early Stage of Development of Sea Urchin Embryos <i>Paracentrotus lividus</i>

Environmental Science & Technology 2014 610 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Camilla Della Torre, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Camilla Della Torre, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Ilaria Corsi, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Ilaria Corsi, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Camilla Della Torre, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Elisa Bergami, Camilla Della Torre, Ilaria Corsi, Elisa Bergami, Ilaria Corsi, Elisa Bergami, Ilaria Corsi, Claudia Faleri, Camilla Della Torre, Ilaria Corsi, Claudia Faleri, Anna Salvati Elisa Bergami, Ilaria Corsi, Elisa Bergami, Camilla Della Torre, Claudia Faleri, Elisa Bergami, Camilla Della Torre, Camilla Della Torre, Camilla Della Torre, Camilla Della Torre, Camilla Della Torre, Camilla Della Torre, Claudia Faleri, Claudia Faleri, Claudia Faleri, Claudia Faleri, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Elisa Bergami, Anna Salvati Elisa Bergami, Claudia Faleri, Ilaria Corsi, Camilla Della Torre, Camilla Della Torre, Camilla Della Torre, Kenneth A. Dawson, Claudia Faleri, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Paola Cirino, Elisa Bergami, Claudia Faleri, Elisa Bergami, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Anna Salvati Camilla Della Torre, Camilla Della Torre, Elisa Bergami, Kenneth A. Dawson, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Camilla Della Torre, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Kenneth A. Dawson, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Kenneth A. Dawson, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Camilla Della Torre, Camilla Della Torre, Ilaria Corsi, Elisa Bergami, Ilaria Corsi, Camilla Della Torre, Ilaria Corsi, Elisa Bergami, Ilaria Corsi, Camilla Della Torre, Elisa Bergami, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Anna Salvati Anna Salvati Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Ilaria Corsi, Anna Salvati

Summary

Researchers exposed sea urchin embryos to polystyrene nanoparticles with different surface charges and studied how the particles accumulated and affected development. They found that positively charged nanoparticles embedded in the embryos' outer membrane and caused significant developmental defects, while negatively charged particles were less harmful. The study suggests that the surface chemistry of nanoplastics plays a key role in determining their toxicity to developing marine organisms.

Polymers
Study Type In vitro

Nanoplastic debris, resulted from runoff and weathering breakdown of macro- and microplastics, represents an emerging concern for marine ecosystems. The aim of the present study was to investigate disposition and toxicity of polystyrene nanoparticles (NPs) in early development of sea urchin embryos (Paracentrotus lividus). NPs with two different surface charges where chosen, carboxylated (PS-COOH) and amine (PS-NH2) polystyrene, the latter being a less common variant, known to induce cell death in several in vitro cell systems. NPs stability in natural seawater (NSW) was measured while disposition and embryotoxicity were monitored within 48 h of postfertilization (hpf). Modulation of genes involved in cellular stress response (cas8, 14-3-3ε, p-38 MAPK, Abcb1, Abcc5) was investigated. PS-COOH forms microaggregates (PDI > 0.4) in NSW, whereas PS-NH2 results are better dispersed (89 ± 2 nm) initially, though they also aggregated partially with time. Their respectively anionic and cationic nature was confirmed by ζ-potential measurements. No embryotoxicity was observed for PS-COOH up to 50 μg mL(-1) whereas PS-NH2 caused severe developmental defects (EC50 3.85 μg mL(-1) 24 hpf and EC50 2.61 μg mL(-1) 48 hpf). PS-COOH accumulated inside embryo's digestive tract while PS-NH2 were more dispersed. Abcb1 gene resulted up-regulated at 48 hpf by PS-COOH whereas PS-NH2 induced cas8 gene at 24 hpf, suggesting an apoptotic pathway. In line with the results obtained with the same PS NPs in several human cell lines, also in sea urchin embryos, differences in surface charges and aggregation in seawater strongly affect their embryotoxicity.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper