4.7 Article

Adverse effects of dietary virgin (nano)microplastics on growth performance, immune response, and resistance to ammonia stress and pathogen challenge in juvenile sea cucumber Apostichopus japonicus (Selenka)

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 423, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.127038

Keywords

Apostichopus japonicus; Polystyrene nano-and microplastics; Stress and immune responses; Ammonia detoxification; Pathogen challenge

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31902360]
  2. Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation Province [ZR2018LC021]
  3. Project of Shandong Province Higher Educational Science and Technology Program [J18KA125]
  4. High-level Talents Research Fund of Qingdao Agricultural University [1120030]
  5. First Class Fishery Discipline Programme in Shandong Province, China

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The study evaluated the adverse effects of dietary polystyrene nanoplastics and microplastics on sea cucumber growth, oxidative stress induction, immune response, ammonia detoxification, and bacterial pathogen resistance. It was found that PS-N/MPs significantly impacted the growth and development of sea cucumbers, with PS-NPs showing more toxic effects than PS-MPs. The findings provide valuable information for understanding the size-dependent toxic effects of PS-N/MPs and early risk warning on marine invertebrates.
It has been well documented that micro- and nanoplastics are emerging pollutants in aquatic environments, and their potential toxic effects has attracted widespread concerns. Here, we evaluated the adverse effects of dietary polystyrene nanoplastics and microplastics (PS-N/MPs) on growth performance, oxidative stress induction, immune response, ammonia detoxification, and bacterial pathogen resistance of sea cucumber Apostichopus japonicus. After collection and acclimation, sea cucumbers were randomized into 3 groups (i.e., control, 100 nm PSNPs and 20 mu m PS-MPs at 100 mg kg-1 diet) for 60-day feeding experiment. Every group contained 360 sea cucumbers which were equally divided into 3 aquaria as biological triplicates. The results showed that the specific growth rate and final weight of the sea cucumbers fed with diets containing PS-N/MPs were significantly lower than those of control group. Dietary virgin PS-N/MPs significantly increased the reactive oxygen species production and malondialdehyde content in coelomic fluid, causing oxidative stress and damage to the growth and development of A. japonicus. During the experiment, 100 nm PS-NPs significantly induced the depletion in cellular and humoral immune parameters. The calculated IBR values based on multi-level biomarkers revealed the size-dependent toxic differences of PS-NPs > PS-MPs. The relative expression levels of GDH and GS mRNA showed first rise and then fall trends after exposure to ammonia, and 100 nm PS-NPs had a more profound impact on suppressing ammonia detoxification compared with 20 mu m PS-MPs. Moreover, the expression of Hsp90, Hsp70, CL, TLR, and CASP2 genes were all down-regulated by ammonia exposure. Taken together of IBR results, ammonia stress test and pathogen challenge, we deduced that dietary 100 nm PS-NPs are more potentially hazardous than 20 mu m PS-MPs. These findings provide valuable information for understanding the sizedependent toxic effects of PS-N/MPs and early risk warning on marine invertebrates.

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