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The mechanism of nanoparticle toxicity to cyanobacteria

Journal

ARCHIVES OF MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 205, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00203-022-03370-2

Keywords

Biochemical; Blue-green algae; Growth rate; Nanotoxicity; Physiology; Ultrastructural changes

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The demand for nanoparticles is increasing, leading to a higher risk of their discharge into the environment. Although nanoparticles have been shown to be toxic to aquatic organisms, the causes of nanoparticle toxicity under environmental conditions are still unknown. Cyanobacteria are an ideal model system to study the impact of nanoparticle toxicity on aquatic biota, as they play a crucial role in ecological balance. Recent research suggests that shading effect, reactive oxygen species generation, membrane damage, and pigment disintegration are the main reasons for nanoparticle toxicity to cyanobacteria.
The demand for nanoparticles is increasing tremendously, and so is the risk of their foreseeable discharge into the environment. Nanoparticles contain a variety of features, including anti-microbial properties, and have been shown to have toxic effects on aquatic organisms previously. However, the causes of nanoparticle toxicity under environmental conditions are still unknown. Exposure to nanoparticles in the environment is unavoidable as nanomaterials are used more prevalent in our daily lives, and as a result, nanotoxicity research is gaining traction. To understand the impact of nanoparticle toxicity on aquatic biota, cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) are an ideal model system. The cyanobacteria play an important role in ecological balance, nutrient cycling, energy flow, biological nitrogen fixation, and environmental remediation, and their susceptibility to nanoparticles can help in making a wise strategy for the mitigation of possible nano-pollution. This article presents an analysis of recent research findings on the toxicological influences of nanoparticles on the growth rate, biochemical changes, ultra-structural changes as well as the nanoparticle toxicity mechanisms in cyanobacteria. The finding suggests that the shading effect, generation of reactive oxygen species, membrane damage and disintegration of pigments are the main reasons for nanoparticle toxicity to the cyanobacteria.

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