First ecotoxicological characterization of paraffin microparticles: a biomarker approach in a marine suspension-feeder, Mytilus sp

Microplastics are one of the main environmental pollutants in marine ecosystems, and their presence in seawater is a consequence of the widespread use of plastic materials in modern commodities. This wide usage of plastics includes the employment of microspheres in common personal care products, whi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science and pollution research international 2020-11, Vol.27 (33), p.41946-41960
Hauptverfasser: Nunes, Bruno, Simões, Maria Inês, Navarro, Juan Carlos, Castro, Bruno Branco
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container_issue 33
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creator Nunes, Bruno
Simões, Maria Inês
Navarro, Juan Carlos
Castro, Bruno Branco
description Microplastics are one of the main environmental pollutants in marine ecosystems, and their presence in seawater is a consequence of the widespread use of plastic materials in modern commodities. This wide usage of plastics includes the employment of microspheres in common personal care products, which end up being ultimately released into the aquatic compartment. Known ecotoxicological effects of microplastics favoured the search for technologically viable and environmentally safer alternatives, such as paraffin wax microparticles, whose ecotoxicological risks have not been entirely characterized. To address this gap, the present study exposed mussels ( Mytilus sp.) for 96 h to three densities (5 mg/L, 20 mg/L and 80 mg/L) of four size ranges (100–300 μm, 300–500 μm, 400–850 μm, and 800–1200 μm) of paraffin wax particles. Toxicological endpoints were the activities of four enzymes involved in key cellular processes, including antioxidant defence (catalase (CAT), glutathione reductase (GRed) and glutathione peroxidase (GPx)) and phase II metabolism (glutathione S -transferases (GSTs)), as well as lipid content and fatty acid profiles of the digestive gland. Significant interactions between the presence/absence of food and paraffin particle density were found, as food sometimes worked as a confounding factor in the analysed biomarkers. Despite this uncertainty, some overall patterns emerged. In general, smaller paraffin wax particles (100–300 μm) caused little effects on the activity of the four enzymes tested, whereas larger particles (800–1200 μm) caused significant effects on almost all biomarkers. CAT activity was enhanced in animals exposed to larger paraffin particles, whilst GPx activity was depressed; GRed activity was not affected by the exposure to paraffin particles. The activity of GSTs was enhanced, but only in one tested condition. No effects were observed in terms of the total lipid content and fatty acids of exposed animals. Overall, data obtained in this work suggest that, at densities of paraffin wax particles comparable to the levels found in the environment for microplastic beads, no toxicity is expected to occur in the tested mussel species, by measuring the here-assessed toxicological endpoints.
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subjects Animals
Antioxidants
Aquatic Pollution
Atmospheric Protection/Air Quality Control/Air Pollution
Beads
Biomarkers
Catalase
Chemical wastewater
Consumer products
Digestive glands
Earth and Environmental Science
Ecological effects
Ecosystem
Ecotoxicology
Environment
Environmental Chemistry
Environmental Health
Environmental science
Enzymes
Exposure
Fatty acids
Food
Glutathione
Glutathione peroxidase
Glutathione reductase
Lipids
Marine ecosystems
Marine pollution
Microparticles
Microplastics
Microspheres
Mollusks
Mussels
Mytilus
Paraffin
Paraffin wax
Particle density (concentration)
Peroxidase
Plastic debris
Plastic pollution
Plastics
Pollutants
Polymers
Reductases
Research Article
Seawater
Toxicity
Waste Water Technology
Water Management
Water Pollutants, Chemical - analysis
Water Pollutants, Chemical - toxicity
Water Pollution Control
title First ecotoxicological characterization of paraffin microparticles: a biomarker approach in a marine suspension-feeder, Mytilus sp
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