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Long-term toxicity of surface-charged polystyrene nanoplastics to marine planktonic species Dunaliella tertiolecta and Artemia franciscana.
Aquat Toxicol. 2017 Aug; 189:159-169.AT

Abstract

Plastic pollution has been globally recognized as a critical issue for marine ecosystems and nanoplastics constitute one of the last unexplored areas to understand the magnitude of this threat. However, current difficulties in sampling and identifying nano-sized debris make hard to assess their occurrence in marine environment. Polystyrene nanoparticles (PS NPs) are largely used as nanoplastics in ecotoxicological studies and although acute exposures have been already investigated, long-term toxicity on marine organisms is unknown. Our study aims at evaluating the effects of 40nm PS anionic carboxylated (PS-COOH) and 50nm cationic amino-modified (PS-NH2) NPs in two planktonic species, the green microalga Dunaliella tertiolecta and the brine shrimp Artemia franciscana, respectively prey and predator. PS NP behaviour in exposure media was determined through DLS, while their toxicity to microalgae and brine shrimps evaluated through 72h growth inhibition test and 14 d long-term toxicity test respectively. Moreover, the expression of target genes (i.e. clap and cstb), having a role in brine shrimp larval growth and molting, was measured in 48h brine shrimp larvae. A different behaviour of the two PS NPs in exposure media as well as diverse toxicity to the two planktonic species was observed. PS-COOH formed micro-scale aggregates (Z-Average>1μm) and did not affect the growth of microalgae up to 50μg/ml or that of brine shrimps up to 10μg/ml. However, these negatively charged NPs were adsorbed on microalgae and accumulated (and excreted) in brine shrimps, suggesting a potential trophic transfer from prey to predator. On the opposite, PS-NH2-formed nano-scale aggregates (Z-Average<200nm), caused inhibition of algal growth (EC50=12.97μg/ml) and mortality in brine shrimps at 14 d (LC50=0.83μg/ml). Moreover, 1μg/ml PS-NH2 significantly induced clap and cstb genes, explaining the physiological alterations (e.g. increase in molting) previously observed in 48h larvae, but also suggesting an apoptotic pathway triggered by cathepsin L-like protease in brine shrimps upon PS-NH2 exposure. These findings provide a first insight into long-term toxicity of nanoplastics to marine plankton, underlining the role of the surface chemistry in determining the behaviour and effects of PS NPs, in terms of adsorption, growth inhibition, accumulation, gene modulation and mortality. The use of long-term end-point has been identified as valuable tool for assessing the impact of nanoplastics on marine planktonic species, being more predictable of real exposure scenarios for risk assessment purposes.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Physical, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Siena, Italy. Electronic address: bergami@student.unisi.it.Department of Physical, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Siena, Italy.Department of Physical, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Siena, Italy.Institute for Environmental Protection and Research (ISPRA), Rome, Italy; Department of Biology and Evolution of Marine Organisms, Anton Dohrn Zoological Station, 80121 Naples, Italy.Department of Life Sciences, University of Siena, 53100 Siena, Italy.Regional Agency for Prevention, Environment and Energy of Emilia-Romagna (Arpae ER), Ferrara, Italy.Centre for BioNano Interactions, School of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, University College Dublin, Ireland.Department of Physical, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Siena, Italy.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

28644993

Citation

Bergami, E, et al. "Long-term Toxicity of Surface-charged Polystyrene Nanoplastics to Marine Planktonic Species Dunaliella Tertiolecta and Artemia Franciscana." Aquatic Toxicology (Amsterdam, Netherlands), vol. 189, 2017, pp. 159-169.
Bergami E, Pugnalini S, Vannuccini ML, et al. Long-term toxicity of surface-charged polystyrene nanoplastics to marine planktonic species Dunaliella tertiolecta and Artemia franciscana. Aquat Toxicol. 2017;189:159-169.
Bergami, E., Pugnalini, S., Vannuccini, M. L., Manfra, L., Faleri, C., Savorelli, F., Dawson, K. A., & Corsi, I. (2017). Long-term toxicity of surface-charged polystyrene nanoplastics to marine planktonic species Dunaliella tertiolecta and Artemia franciscana. Aquatic Toxicology (Amsterdam, Netherlands), 189, 159-169. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquatox.2017.06.008
Bergami E, et al. Long-term Toxicity of Surface-charged Polystyrene Nanoplastics to Marine Planktonic Species Dunaliella Tertiolecta and Artemia Franciscana. Aquat Toxicol. 2017;189:159-169. PubMed PMID: 28644993.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Long-term toxicity of surface-charged polystyrene nanoplastics to marine planktonic species Dunaliella tertiolecta and Artemia franciscana. AU - Bergami,E, AU - Pugnalini,S, AU - Vannuccini,M L, AU - Manfra,L, AU - Faleri,C, AU - Savorelli,F, AU - Dawson,K A, AU - Corsi,I, Y1 - 2017/06/15/ PY - 2017/03/05/received PY - 2017/06/07/revised PY - 2017/06/14/accepted PY - 2017/6/24/pubmed PY - 2017/10/17/medline PY - 2017/6/24/entrez KW - Cathepsin L-like protease KW - Ecotoxicity KW - Growth inhibition KW - Marine plankton KW - Polystyrene nanoparticles KW - Surface charges SP - 159 EP - 169 JF - Aquatic toxicology (Amsterdam, Netherlands) JO - Aquat Toxicol VL - 189 N2 - Plastic pollution has been globally recognized as a critical issue for marine ecosystems and nanoplastics constitute one of the last unexplored areas to understand the magnitude of this threat. However, current difficulties in sampling and identifying nano-sized debris make hard to assess their occurrence in marine environment. Polystyrene nanoparticles (PS NPs) are largely used as nanoplastics in ecotoxicological studies and although acute exposures have been already investigated, long-term toxicity on marine organisms is unknown. Our study aims at evaluating the effects of 40nm PS anionic carboxylated (PS-COOH) and 50nm cationic amino-modified (PS-NH2) NPs in two planktonic species, the green microalga Dunaliella tertiolecta and the brine shrimp Artemia franciscana, respectively prey and predator. PS NP behaviour in exposure media was determined through DLS, while their toxicity to microalgae and brine shrimps evaluated through 72h growth inhibition test and 14 d long-term toxicity test respectively. Moreover, the expression of target genes (i.e. clap and cstb), having a role in brine shrimp larval growth and molting, was measured in 48h brine shrimp larvae. A different behaviour of the two PS NPs in exposure media as well as diverse toxicity to the two planktonic species was observed. PS-COOH formed micro-scale aggregates (Z-Average>1μm) and did not affect the growth of microalgae up to 50μg/ml or that of brine shrimps up to 10μg/ml. However, these negatively charged NPs were adsorbed on microalgae and accumulated (and excreted) in brine shrimps, suggesting a potential trophic transfer from prey to predator. On the opposite, PS-NH2-formed nano-scale aggregates (Z-Average<200nm), caused inhibition of algal growth (EC50=12.97μg/ml) and mortality in brine shrimps at 14 d (LC50=0.83μg/ml). Moreover, 1μg/ml PS-NH2 significantly induced clap and cstb genes, explaining the physiological alterations (e.g. increase in molting) previously observed in 48h larvae, but also suggesting an apoptotic pathway triggered by cathepsin L-like protease in brine shrimps upon PS-NH2 exposure. These findings provide a first insight into long-term toxicity of nanoplastics to marine plankton, underlining the role of the surface chemistry in determining the behaviour and effects of PS NPs, in terms of adsorption, growth inhibition, accumulation, gene modulation and mortality. The use of long-term end-point has been identified as valuable tool for assessing the impact of nanoplastics on marine planktonic species, being more predictable of real exposure scenarios for risk assessment purposes. SN - 1879-1514 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/28644993/Long_term_toxicity_of_surface_charged_polystyrene_nanoplastics_to_marine_planktonic_species_Dunaliella_tertiolecta_and_Artemia_franciscana_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0166-445X(17)30162-5 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -