2 research outputs found
Nanoplastics Affect the Bioaccumulation and Gut Toxicity of Emerging Perfluoroalkyl Acid Alternatives to Aquatic Insects (<i>Chironomus kiinensis</i>): Importance of Plastic Surface Charge
Persistent
organic pollutants (POPs) have been widely suggested as
contributors to the aquatic insect biomass decline, and their bioavailability
is affected by engineered particles. However, the toxicity effects
of emerging ionizable POPs mediated by differentially charged engineered
nanoparticles on aquatic insects are unknown. In this study, 6:2 chlorinated
polyfluoroalkyl ether sulfonate (F-53B, an emerging perfluoroalkyl
acid alternative) was selected as a model emerging ionizable POP;
the effect of differentially charged nanoplastics (NPs, 50 nm, 0.5
g/kg) on F-53B bioaccumulation and gut toxicity to Chironomus
kiinensis were investigated through histopathology, biochemical
index, and gut microbiota analysis. The results showed that when the
dissolved concentration of F-53B remained constant, the presence of
NPs enhanced the adverse effects on larval growth, emergence, gut
oxidative stress and inflammation induced by F-53B, and the enhancement
caused by positively charged NP-associated F-53B was stronger than
that caused by the negatively charged one. This was mainly because
positively charged NPs, due to their greater adsorption capacity and
higher bioavailable fraction of associated F-53B, increased the bioaccumulation
of F-53B in larvae more significantly than negatively charged NPs.
In addition, positively charged NPs interact more easily with gut
biomembranes and microbes with a negative charge, further increasing
the probability of F-53B interacting with gut biomembranes and microbiota
and thereby aggravating gut damage and key microbial dysbacteriosis
related to gut health. These findings demonstrate that the surface
charge of NPs can regulate the bioaccumulation and toxicity of ionizable
POPs to aquatic insects
Luminescent Coordination Polymers for Highly Sensitive Detection of Nitrobenzene
Three new luminescent coordination
polymers (CPs), [Ag<sub>2</sub>(bpp)Â(Hsba)]·H<sub>2</sub>O (<b>1</b>), [CdÂ(bpp)Â(Hsba)·H<sub>2</sub>O] (<b>2</b>), and [PbÂ(bpp)<sub>3</sub>Â(H<sub>2</sub>sba)<sub>2</sub>] (<b>3</b>) (bpp = 1,3-bisÂ(4-pyridyl)Âpropane,
H<sub>3</sub>sba = 2,4-dichloro-5-sulfamoylbenzoic acid), have been
designed and synthesized by hydrothermal methods. Compound <b>1</b> exhibits left- and right-handed helical chains. Compound <b>2</b> shows a 2-fold parallel interpenetration <b>sql</b> net with
4<sup>4</sup>·6<sup>2</sup> topology. Compound <b>3</b> displays a supramolecular wavelike chain. These three title CPs
are used as fluorescence sensors for highly selective and sensitive
detection of nitrobenzene in a wide linear detection range