4.7 Article

Dietary exposure to nTiO2 reduces byssus performance of mussels under ocean warming

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 881, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.163499

Keywords

Ocean warming; nTiO 2; Food chain; Mussel; Byssus

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This study investigated the effects of nano-titanium dioxide on the predation and attachment abilities of thick shell mussels. The results showed that warming and nTiO2 exposure can impair the mussels' predation and attachment abilities, posing a potential threat to their survival.
Nano-titanium dioxide (nTiO2) is a widely used nanomaterial posing potential ecological risk for marine ecosystems that might be enhanced by elevated temperatures such as expected during climate change. nTiO2 may affect benthic filter feeders like mussels through waterborne exposures and via food chain due to the adsorption on/in algae. Mussel byssus are proteinaceous fibers secreted by byssal glands of the mussels for attachment. Byssus production and me-chanical properties are sensitive to environmental stressors but the combined effects of warming and nTiO2 on byssus performance of mussels are unclear hampering our understanding of the predation and dislodgement risk of mussels under the multiple stressor scenarios. We explored the effects of a short-term (14-day) single and combined exposures to warming (28 & DEG;C) and 100 & mu;g L-1 nTiO2 (including food co-exposure) on the byssus performance of the thick shell mussel Mytilus coruscus. The mechanical strength (measured as the breaking force) of the byssal threads was impaired by warming and nTiO2 (including food co-exposure), but the number and length of the byssal threads were increased. The mRNA expression levels of mussel foot proteins (mfp-3, mfp-5) and pre-collagens (preCOL-D, preCOL-P, preCOL-NG) were up-regulated to varying degrees, with the strongest effects induced by warming. This indicates that the phys-iological and molecular mechanisms of byssus secretion are plastic. However, downregulation of the mRNA expression of preCOL-D and preCOL-P under the combined warming and nTiO2 exposures indicate the limits of these plasticity mechanisms and suggest that the attachment ability and survival of the mussels may be impaired if the pollution or temperature conditions further deteriorate.

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