4.7 Article

Not so dangerous? PET microplastics toxicity on freshwater microalgae and cyanobacteria*

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 329, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2023.121628

Keywords

Microplastics Microalgae Stress Toxicity Water pollution; Microplastic synthesis; C. vulgaris; C. reinhardtii; L. (A.) maxima

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This research focuses on the impact of PET-MPs on green microalgae and cyanobacteria. The study found that C. reinhardtii is the most sensitive to PET-MPs, while the cyanobacteria have the highest adsorption of PET-MPs. Additionally, all tested organisms showed cell damage after exposure to PET-MPs, with the cyanobacteria being the least affected. Further long-term experiments on environmentally relevant organisms are needed to study the effects of PET-MPs.
Microalgae and cyanobacteria are among the most important primary producers and are responsible for the production of 50-80% of the oxygen on Earth. They can be significantly affected by plastic pollution, as the vast majority of plastic waste ends up in rivers and then the oceans. This research focuses on green microalgae Chlorella vulgaris (C. vulgaris), Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (C. reinhardtii), filamentous cyanobacterium Limnospira (Arthrospira) maxima (L.(A.) maxima) and how they are affected by environmentally relevant PET-MPs (polyethylene-terephtalate microplastics). Manufactured PET-MPs have asymmetric shape, size between 3 and 7 mu m and were used in concentrations ranging from 5 mg/L to 80 mg/L. The highest inhibitory rate of growth was found in C. reinhardtii (-24%). Concentration-dependent changes in chlorophyll a composition were found in C. vulgaris and C. reinhardtii, not in L. (A.) maxima. Furthermore, cell damage was detected in all three organisms by CRYO-SEM (shriveling, cell wall disruption), but the cyanobacterium was the least damaged. A PETfingerprint was detected on the surface of all tested organisms using FTIR, indicating the adherence of PETMPs. The highest rate of PET-MPs adsorption was detected in L. (A.) maxima. Specifically, characteristic spectra were observed at similar to 721, 850, 1100, 1275, 1342, and 1715 cm-1 which are specific for functional groups of PET-MPs. Nitrogen and carbon content significantly increased in L. (A.) maxima under exposure to 80 mg/L due to the PET-MPs adherence and mechanical stress. In all three tested organisms, weak exposure-related ROS generation was detected. In general, cyanobacteria seem to be more resistant to the effects of MPs. However, organisms in the aquatic environment are exposed to MPs over a longer time scale, so it is important to use the present findings for further longer-term experiments on environmentally relevant organisms.

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