| Literature DB >> 32513186 |
Minne Prüst1, Jonelle Meijer1, Remco H S Westerink2.
Abstract
Given the global abundance and environmental persistence, exposure of humans and (aquatic) animals to micro- and nanoplastics is unavoidable. Current evidence indicates that micro- and nanoplastics can be taken up by aquatic organism as well as by mammals. Upon uptake, micro- and nanoplastics can reach the brain, although there is limited information regarding the number of particles that reaches the brain and the potential neurotoxicity of these small plastic particles.Earlier studies indicated that metal and metal-oxide nanoparticles, such as gold (Au) and titanium dioxide (TiO2) nanoparticles, can also reach the brain to exert a range of neurotoxic effects. Given the similarities between these chemically inert metal(oxide) nanoparticles and plastic particles, this review aims to provide an overview of the reported neurotoxic effects of micro- and nanoplastics in different species and in vitro. The combined data, although fragmentary, indicate that exposure to micro- and nanoplastics can induce oxidative stress, potentially resulting in cellular damage and an increased vulnerability to develop neuronal disorders. Additionally, exposure to micro- and nanoplastics can result in inhibition of acetylcholinesterase activity and altered neurotransmitter levels, which both may contribute to the reported behavioral changes.Currently, a systematic comparison of the neurotoxic effects of different particle types, shapes, sizes at different exposure concentrations and durations is lacking, but urgently needed to further elucidate the neurotoxic hazard and risk of exposure to micro- and nanoplastics.Entities:
Keywords: Acetylcholinesterase inhibition; Microplastic; Nanoparticles; Nanoplastic; Neurotoxic hazard; Oxidative stress; Plastic particles
Mesh:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32513186 PMCID: PMC7282048 DOI: 10.1186/s12989-020-00358-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Part Fibre Toxicol ISSN: 1743-8977 Impact factor: 9.400
Overview of the literature investigating neurotoxic effects of micro- and nanoplastics. The particle concentration is only mentioned for micro- and nanoplastics or for mixtures containing micro- and nanoplastics. The reported particle size reflects the diameter of primary particles. Every study included a control group that was not exposed to micro- and nanoplastics or any other substance, or measurements were taken at timepoint 0, before exposure
| Model system | Particle type / size | Exposure method | Exposure dose | (Neuro)toxic effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PS-MPs of 0.1, 0.5, 1, 2 & 5 μm | in medium, for 3 days | 1 mg/L medium | Excitatory toxicity on locomotive behaviour. Damage to cholinergic and GABAergic neurons, oxidative stress; no clear size-dependence). | [ | |
| Earthworm | PE-MPs of 100–200 μm | in soil, for 7–28 days | 0.1, 0.25, 0.5, 1.0 and 1.5 g/kg soil | Particle ingestion at 1.5 g/kg. Skin damage (1.5 g/kg). Increased AChE activity (≥1.0 g/kg and 1.5 g/kg at respectively 21 and 28 days). Increased CAT activity and MDA levels (1.0 g/kg, 28 days). | [ |
| Zebra mussel ( | PS-MPs mixture of 1 & 10 μm (1:1) | In water, for 3 & 6 days | 1 × 106 MPs/L (mix 1) 4 × 106 MPs/L (mix 2) | Particle presence in hemolymph and tissues. Increased DA levels (mix 1, 3 days & mix 2, 6 days). Cellular stress (decreased CAT; mix 1, 6 days). No change in AChE or MAO activity or in Glu and 5-HT levels. No genotoxicity. | [ |
| Peppery furrow shell ( | PS-MPs of 20 μm | In water, for 14 days followed by 7 days of depuration | 1 mg/L (~ 4000 particles/L) | Particle presence in hemolymph, gills and digestive gland. Increased SOD (gills, ≥7 days exposure; digestive gland, ≥14 days). AChE and LPO activity decreased (gills, 3–14 days). CAT activity decreased (digestive gland, ≥3 days). | [ |
| Mediterranean mussel ( | PS-MPs of 0.11 μm | In water, for 96 h | 0.005, 0.05, 0.5, 5 and 50 mg/L MPs alone, and mixture of 0.05 mg/L PS-MPs + 6.3 μg/L Cbz | Altered gene expression (MPs alone and MPs with Cbz; ≥ 0.05 mg/L). ChE inhibition in hemolymph (MPs 0.05 and 0.5 mg/L). DNA damage (≥ 0.05 mg/L). | [ |
| Mediterranean mussel ( | PE-MPs and PS-MPs of 100 μm | In water, for 7 days | 1.5 g/L (with and without 50 μg/L pyrene) | Particle presence in hemolymph, gills and gut. Reduction of AChE activity in gills (PE and PS). Nuclear alterations and DNA damage, but no changes in oxidative stress markers (GST, CAT, LPO). | [ |
| Asian clam ( | MPs (Red Fluorescent Polymer Microspheres)*of 1–5 μm | In water, for 96 h | 0.2 mg/L (~ 37.000 particles/L) and 0.7 mg/L (~ 128.500 particles), with or without 1.8 mg/L and 7.1 mg/L Florfenicol (antimicrobial agent) | Particle presence in gut, digestive gland lumen, connective tissue, hemolymphatic sinuses, and gills surface. Inhibition (31%) of ChE activity (0.2 mg/L, but not at 0.7 mg/L), which was exacerbated by Florfenicol. | [ |
| Asian clam ( | MPs (Red Fluorescent Polymer Microspheres)*of 1–5 μm | In water, for 8 days | 0.13 mg/L (~ 24.000 particles/L), with or without 30 μg/L mercury | Particle presence in digestive tract and gills. Inhibition (15%) of ChE activity. Increased (~ 2-fold) LPO levels suggestive for oxidative stress (LPO). | [ |
| Striped barnacle ( | PS-MPs (fluorescent) of 0.1 μm | In water, for 24 and 48 h | 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, 1, 10 mg/L | Particle presence in gut. Decreased swimming speed (≥ 1 mg/L). Increase in ChE activity (0.001–0.1 mg/L). Decrease in (P)ChE activity (1 mg/L). Increase in CAT activity (0.1–1.0 mg/L). | [ |
| Brine shrimp ( | PS-MPs (fluorescent) of 0.1 μm | In water, for 24 and 48 h | 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, 1, 10 mg/L | Particle presence in gut. Increased swimming speed (≥ 1 mg/L). Decrease in AChE activity (0.001–0.01 mg/L). Increase in PChE activity (0.01–0.1 mg/L). Increase in CAT activity (0.001–1.0 mg/L). | [ |
| Brine shrimp ( | PS-NH2 NPs of 50 nm | In water, for 48 h up to 14 days | 0.1, 1.0, 3.0 and 10.0 mg/L | ChE activity decreased (1 mg/L). CbE activity decreased (1 mg/L). GST decreased (1 mg/L). CAT decreased (1 mg/L). | [ |
| Japanese rice fish ( | PS-NPs of 40 nm | In medium, for 7 days | 10 mg/L | Particle presence in gills, intestine, testis, liver, blood and brain, suggesting penetration of BBB. | [ |
| Red tilapia ( | PS-MPs of 0.1 μm | In medium, for 1–14 days | 1, 10 and 100 μg/L | Particle presence in gut, gills, liver and brain tissue (≥ 1 μg/L, ≥ 6 days). Inhibition of AChE activity (37.7%) in brain (≥ 1 μg/L, ≥ 3 days). Antioxidant enzyme induction (SOD; ≥ 1 μg/L, 1 days > 3–14 days); no change in MDA levels. | [ |
| Crucian carp ( | positively charged amino-modified PS-NP and -MP of 53 and 180 nm | In water, for 64 days or via PS-NP fed crustaceans | 100 mg/L | Particle presence in brain (53 nm and 180 nm). brain weight loss (53 nm and 180 nm). Behavioural changes and enlarged cerebral gyri (53 nm). | [ |
| Convict surgeonfish, juvenile ( | PS-MPs of 90 μm | In water, for 8 days | 0.81 mg/L (~ 5000 particles/L) | Particle presence in digestive tract. No effect on foraging behaviour, body weight or survival rate when exposed to a predator. | [ |
| Zebrafish, juvenile ( | PE-MPs of 10 μm | In water, for 10 and 20 days | 5, 50 and 500 μg/L (or 1040, 10,400 and 104,000 particles/L) | Particle presence in intestine, but not in brain or other organs. No changes in growth or | [ |
| Zebrafish, adult ( | PE-MPs of 10–22, 45–53, 90–106, 212–250 and 500–600 μm | In water, for 96 h | 11, 110, 1.100 MPs/L | Ingestion and particle presence in intestine and gills (19.7–558.4 μm). Altered locomotive behaviour (≥ 110 MPs/L) and induction of seizures (≥1100 MPs/L). No changes in mortality. | [ |
| Discus fish ( | PE-MPs of 70–88 μm | In water, for 30 days (28 °C and 31 °C) | 200 μg/L | Particle presence in body (31 °C > 28 °C). Decreased AChE in head (both 28 °C and 31 °C). No changes in growth or survival rate. | [ |
| Zebrafish, larvae ( | PS-NPs of 47 nm, PS-MPs of 41 μm | In water, for 5 days | 1 mg/L, with or without 2 and 20 μg/L EE2 | Particle presence in body. Inhibition of AChE by 9% (MPs), 40% (NPs) 21% (MP and NP co-exposed with EE2); locomotor hypoactivity 22% (NPs) and 18–36% (co-exposed with EE2). | [ |
| Zebrafish, larvae ( | PS-NPs of 50 nm | In water, for 3 days | 1 mg/L, with or without 0.78 and 1.0 μg/L BPA | Particle presence in head, gills and muscle. Decreased AChE activity 46% (NPs alone) and increased DA levels (only for mixture of PS-NP with BPA). | [ |
| Barramundi, juvenile ( | PS-MPs of 97 μm | In water, for 24 h | 100 MPs/L, with or without 100 nM Pyrene | Little (co-exposure) or no (PS-MPs alone) effect on swimming movement or foraging behaviour. | [ |
| Red tilapia ( | PS-MPs of 0.1 μm | In water, for 1–14 days | 1, 10 and 100 μg/L, with 50 μg/L ROX | Particle presence in gut, gills and to a lesser extent also brain and liver. Decrease in AChE activity (co-exposed, ≥ 1 μg/L). Note: there was no ‘MP only’ group. | [ |
| Sea bass, juvenile ( | MPs* of 1–5 μm | In water, for 96 h | 0.26 and 0.69 mg/L, with or without 10 and 16 μg/L mercury | Inhibition of AChE activity (50%) and increased LPO in the brain (0.69 mg/L MPs). Inhibition of AChE (64–76%) and increased LPO in brain exacerbated by co-exposure (mercury, all concentrations). | [ |
| Common goby, juvenile ( | PE-MPs of 1–5 μm | In water, for 96 h | 0.216 mg/L, with or without 5.6–28.4 mg/L chromium | AChE activity decreased with 20% (MPs alone) and 31% (co-exposed with chromium). | [ |
| Common goby, juvenile ( | PE-MPs of 1–5 μm | In water, for 96 h | 0.18 mg/L, with or without 3–50 mg/L cadmium | Increased mortality (MP alone and in mixture with Cd); decreased AChE activity (MP alone and mixture MP with 3, 6 and 13 mg/L); behavioural inhibition (MP alone and mixture MP with 3, 6 and 13 mg/L Cd); no oxidative stress (LPO and GST). | [ |
| Common goby, juveline ( | PE-MPs of 1–5 μm | In water, for 96 h | 18.4 μg/L and 0.18 mg/L, with or without 200 μg/L pyrene | Decrease in AChE activity (22%) (MP alone and co-exposed) (18.4 μg/L = 184 μg/L). | [ |
| Common goby, juvenile ( | PE-MPs of 1–5 μm | In water, for 96 h | 0.18 mg/L, with or without 0.2 mg/L Au0-NP | Insignificant AChE activity inhibition (13%); oxidative stress (LPO, GST) (25 °C, not 20 °C). | [ |
| Common goby, juveline ( | PE-MPs of 1–5 μm | In water, for 96 h | 0.18 mg/L, with or without 1.3–10 mg/L cefalexin | Decrease in AChE (8% at 20 °C, 21% at 25 °C), behavioural inhibition (28% at 25 °C) and mortality (33% 25 °C); mixture increased toxicity of MPs and cefalexin. | [ |
| Mouse ( | PS-MPs of 5 μm and 20 μm | Oral gavage for 30 days | 0.01–0.5 mg/day (~ 0.5–25 mg/kg body weight/day, assuming bodyweight of 20 g). (1 × 105–5 × 106 5 μm particles / 2 × 103–1 × 105 20 μm particles) | Particle presence in gut, liver and kidney. In liver, dose-dependent increase in AChE, LDH, GSH-Px and SOD activity; dose-dependent decrease in ATP and CAT in liver (≥ 0.01 mg/day, both 5 and 20 μm). | [ |
| Wistar rat, male ( | PS-MPs of 40 nm | Oral gavage for 35 days | 1, 3, 6 and 10 mg/kg body weight/day | No alterations in behaviour or body weight gain. | [ |
| Human-derived cerebral cell line (T98G) and epithelial cells (HeLa) | PE-MPs of 3–16 μm, PS-MPs of 10 μm | In culture medium, for 24 h | 0.05, 0.1, 1, 10 mg/L | ROS generation (PS only at 10 mg/L; both cell lines). No changes in cell viability. | [ |
| Primary mouse astrocytes, neurons, microglia and brain vascular endothelial cells | PS-PEG and PS-COOH NPs of 55 nm | In culture medium, for 24 h | 7.8–250 mg/L (or 3 × 1013 up to 1 × 1015 NPs/L) | Decreased mitochondrial activity and cell viability (≥ 250 mg/L). Internalization of NPs (2 × 1014 NPs/L). | [ |
| Human-derived embryonic stem cell (3D model) | PE-NPs of 33 nm | In culture medium, for 84 h and for 18 days | 22.5, 45, 90, 180, 360, 720 and 1440 mg/L (48 h), 22.5, 45, 90, 180, 360 mg/L (18 days) | 48-h exposure: Penetration of NPs into 3D structure, internalization of NPs (≥ 360 mg/L). Increased cytotoxicity and oxidative stress (dose-dependent). 18-day exposure: PE-NP accumulation (≥ 22.6 mg/L). Altered gene expression (22.5 mg/L) and increased cytotoxicity (≥ 180 μg/mL). | [ |
Abbreviations: 5-HT serotonin, AChE acetylcholinesterase, Au gold, BBB blood-brain barrier, BPA Bisphenol-A, CAT catalase, CbE carboxylesterase, Cbz carbamazepine, Cd cadmium, cholinesterase, DA dopamine, EE2 17α-ethinylestradiol, Glu glutamate, GST glutathione-S-transferase, LPO lipid peroxidation, MAO monoamine oxidase, MDA malondialdehyde, MP microplastics, NP nanoplastics, PChE propionylcholinesterase, PE polyethylene, PS polystyrene, ROX Roxithromycin, SOD superoxide dismutase. Asterisks (*) indicate the composition of the plastic particles is not disclosed
Fig. 1Overview of the neurotoxic effects of micro- and nanoplastics. Plastic particles can reach the systemic circulation and ultimately the brain via uptake through the gills, gut and possibly also the lungs or directly via the nasal cavity. Once in the brain, micro- and nanoplastics can induce oxidative stress, potentially resulting in cellular damage and neuroinflammation, which may ultimately increase onset and development of neurodevelopmental and/or neurodegenerative disorders. Micro- and nanoplastics in the brain can also results in inhibition of AChE and changes in neurotransmitter levels, which likely contribute to the observed behavioral changes. It should be noted though that most evidence is fragmentary and obtained from different, mainly aquatic species, highlighting the need for extensive systematic research to fully elucidate the neurotoxic potential of micro- and nanoplastics. See Table 1 for details