Enrico Montalbetti, V. Isa, S. Vencato, Y. Louis, S. Montano, S. Lavorano, D. Maggioni, P. Galli, D. Seveso
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We found that samples exposed to >50 mg l−1 of microplastic showed significant increase in the activities of the antioxidant enzymes glutathione reductase, catalase, and superoxide dismutase, suggesting a rise in oxidative stress. Furthermore, exposure to microplastics increased lipid peroxidation, indicating oxidative damage. Overall, our results show that similar to hard corals, microplastic ingestion causes oxidative stress and cellular damage in soft corals. Our study provides a first assessment of physiological effects of microplastic exposure on the soft coral, Coelogorgia palmosa, highlighting the need for further investigations about these contaminants and their influence on marine benthic fauna. Such information is crucial to understand how different reef organisms respond to microplastic pollution and who the ecological winners or losers will be in an increasingly polluted marine environment. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
微塑料是海洋环境中持续存在且无处不在的污染源,对热带珊瑚礁构成严重威胁。微塑料对造礁(硬)珊瑚的影响已被记录在案(干扰正常的消化过程、息肉收缩、氧化应激、光合作用机制受损、白化)。然而,微塑料对软珊瑚(热带珊瑚礁中第二丰富的底栖动物)的影响仍有待深入研究。在这项工作中,我们分析了短期微塑料暴露对软珊瑚Coelogorgia palmosa细胞生理学的影响。我们发现,暴露于bbb50 mg l - 1微塑料的样品显示抗氧化酶谷胱甘肽还原酶、过氧化氢酶和超氧化物歧化酶的活性显著增加,表明氧化应激增加。此外,接触微塑料会增加脂质过氧化,表明氧化损伤。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,与硬珊瑚类似,微塑料摄入会导致软珊瑚的氧化应激和细胞损伤。我们的研究首次评估了微塑料暴露对软珊瑚(Coelogorgia palmosa)的生理影响,强调了进一步研究这些污染物及其对海洋底栖动物的影响的必要性。这些信息对于了解不同的珊瑚礁生物如何应对微塑料污染以及在污染日益严重的海洋环境中谁是生态赢家或输家至关重要。微塑料污染在细胞和分子水平上的影响从未在藻藻类珊瑚中进行过研究。50 - 70 mg l - 1的聚乙烯浓度在48 h后引起棕榈黄檀氧化应激显著升高。暴露于50 mg l - 1 48 h后,记录了显著的氧化损伤。暴露于微塑料后,细胞保护蛋白Hsp60的表达未见明显变化。
Short-term microplastic exposure triggers cellular damage through oxidative stress in the soft coral Coelogorgia palmosa
ABSTRACT Microplastics are a persistent and ubiquitous source of pollution in the marine environment, representing a severe threat to tropical coral reefs. The effects of microplastics on reef-building (hard) corals have been documented (interference with normal digestion process, polyp retraction, oxidative stress, impairment of the photosynthetic machinery, bleaching). However, the impact of microplastics on soft corals, the second most abundant benthos of tropical reefs, remains to be thoroughly studied. In this work, we analysed the effects of a short-term microplastic exposure on the cellular physiology of the soft coral Coelogorgia palmosa. We found that samples exposed to >50 mg l−1 of microplastic showed significant increase in the activities of the antioxidant enzymes glutathione reductase, catalase, and superoxide dismutase, suggesting a rise in oxidative stress. Furthermore, exposure to microplastics increased lipid peroxidation, indicating oxidative damage. Overall, our results show that similar to hard corals, microplastic ingestion causes oxidative stress and cellular damage in soft corals. Our study provides a first assessment of physiological effects of microplastic exposure on the soft coral, Coelogorgia palmosa, highlighting the need for further investigations about these contaminants and their influence on marine benthic fauna. Such information is crucial to understand how different reef organisms respond to microplastic pollution and who the ecological winners or losers will be in an increasingly polluted marine environment. Key policy highlights The effect of microplastic contamination at the cellular and molecular level has never been investigated before in alcyonacean corals. Concentrations of 50–70 mg l−1 of polyethylene caused significant rise in oxidative stress in Coelogorgia palmosa after 48 h. After 48 h exposure to 50 mg l−1 significant oxidative damage was recorded. No significant modulation in the expression of the cytoprotective protein Hsp60 was observed after exposure to microplastics.
期刊介绍:
Marine Biology Research (MBRJ) provides a worldwide forum for key information, ideas and discussion on all areas of marine biology and biological oceanography. Founded in 2005 as a merger of two Scandinavian journals, Sarsia and Ophelia, MBRJ is based today at the Institute of Marine Research, Bergen, Norway. The Journal’s scope encompasses basic and applied research from all oceans and marine habitats and on all marine organisms, the main criterium for acceptance being quality.