4.7 Article

Microfluidic electric parallel egg-laying assay and application to in-vivo toxicity screening of microplastics using C. elegans

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 783, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147055

Keywords

Microplastics toxicity; C; elegans; Microfluidics; Egg-laying; Neurodegeneration; Ecotoxicology

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada
  2. Ontario Trillium Scholarship
  3. Early Researcher Award

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This study introduced a novel microfluidic electric egg-laying assay for phenotypical assessment of multiple worms in parallel. The effects of glucose and polystyrene microplastics on worm behavior and neurodegeneration were studied, revealing significant impacts on egg-laying and growth. It also highlighted intra-population variability in microplastics uptake and its correlation with physiological and behavioral phenotypes at a single-worm level.
Environmental pollutants like microplastics are posing health concerns on aquatic animals and the ecosystem. Microplastic toxicity studies using Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) as a model are evolving but methodologically hindered from obtaining statistically strong data sets, detecting toxicity effects based on microplastics uptake, and correlating physiological and behavioural effects at an individual-worm level. In this paper, we report a novel microfluidic electric egg-laying assay for phenotypical assessment of multiple worms in parallel. The effects of glucose and polystyrene microplastics at two concentrations on the worms' electric egg-laying, length, diameter, and length contraction during exposure to electric signal were studied. The device contained eight parallel worm-dwelling microchannels called electric traps, with equivalent electrical fields, in which the worms were electrically stimulated for egg deposition and fluorescently imaged for assessment of neuronal and microplastic uptake expression. A new bidirectional stimulation technique was developed, and the device design was optimized to achieve a testing efficiency of 91.25%. Exposure of worms to 100 mM glucose resulted in a significant reduction in their egg-laying and size. The effects of 1 mu m polystyrene microparticles at concentrations of 100 and 1000 mg/L on the electric egg-laying behaviour, size, and neurodegeneration of N2 and NW1229 (expressing GFP pan-neuronally) worms were also studied. Of the two concentrations, 1000 mg/L caused severe egg-laying deficiency and growth retardation as well as neurodegeneration. Additionally, using single-worm level phenotyping, we noticed intra-population variability in microplastics uptake and correlation with the above physiological and behavioural phenotypes, which was hidden in the population-averaged results. Taken together, these results suggest the appropriateness of our microfluidic assay for toxicological studies and for assessing the phenotypical heterogeneity in response to microplastics. (c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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