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The single and combined effects of mercury and polystyrene plastic beads on antioxidant-related systems in the brackish water flea: toxicological interaction depending on mercury species and plastic bead size.
Summary
Exposure of small crustaceans to mixtures of mercury and polystyrene plastic beads showed complex toxicological interactions — the effects depended on both the size of the plastic beads and the chemical form of mercury. The findings highlight that the real-world health risks of plastic pollution cannot be understood in isolation from the other chemicals that co-occur with plastics in aquatic environments.
Plastics are considered as a major threat to marine environments owing their high usage, persistence, and negative effects on aquatic organisms. Although they often exist as mixtures in combination with other pollutants (e.g., mercury (Hg)) in aquatic ecosystems, the combined effects of plastics and ambient pollutants remain unclear. Therefore, in the present study, we investigated the toxicological interactions between Hg and plastics using two Hg species (HgCl and MeHgCl) and different-sized polystyrene (PS) beads (diameter: 0.05, 0.5, and 6-μm) in the brackish water flea Diaphanosoma celebensis. The single and combined effects of Hg and PS beads on mortality were investigated, and changes in the antioxidant system and lipid peroxidation were further analyzed. After 48-h exposure to single Hg, HgCl induced a higher mortality rate than MeHgCl. The combined exposure test showed that 0.05-μm PS beads can enhance the toxicity of both the Hg species. The expression of GST-mu, glutathione S-transferease (GST) activity and malondialdehyde (MDA) content increased significantly after exposure to Hg alone (HgCl or MeHgCl) exposure. Combined exposure with PS beads modulated the effects of Hg on the antioxidant system depending on bead size and the Hg species. In particular, the 0.05-μm beads significantly increased the expression level of GST-mu, GST activity and MDA content, regardless of Hg species. These findings suggest that toxicological interactions between Hg and PS beads depend on the type of Hg species and the size of PS beads; nano-sized 0.05-μm PS beads can induce synergistic toxicity with Hg.
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