TY - JOUR
T1 - Protein corona-induced aggregation of differently sized nanoplastics
T2 - impacts of protein type and concentration
AU - Li, Xing
AU - He, Erkai
AU - Xia, Bing
AU - Liu, Yang
AU - Zhang, Peihua
AU - Cao, Xinde
AU - Zhao, Ling
AU - Xu, Xiaoyun
AU - Qiu, Hao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021.
PY - 2021/6
Y1 - 2021/6
N2 - Nanoplastic contamination is one of the pressing environmental concerns globally. Among many environmental factors in aquatic systems, ubiquitous proteins are expected to affect the physicochemical properties of nanoplastics and subsequently influence their fate, transport, and toxicity. Here, time-resolved dynamic light scattering was used to investigate the comparative effects of negatively charged bovine serum albumin (BSA) and positively charged bovine trypsin (TRY) on polystyrene nanoplastic (PSNP) aggregation. The critical coagulation concentrations (NaCl) of 20 and 100 nm PSNPs decreased from 311 and 361 mM to 10 and 43 mM after interacting with TRY, respectively, mainly due to the additional electrostatic attractive force and intramolecular bridging. The attachment efficiencies of BSA-PSNP conjugates decreased from 1 to 0 with increasing electrolyte concentration, suggesting that the patch-charge attractive force may be screened by steric repulsion. At a relatively high level of protein (>10 mg L−1), PSNPs remained stable in BSA solution, but aggregated quickly in TRY solution. Results clearly showed that the aggregation of nanoplastics was highly related to the electrical charge of the proteins. Compared with 100 nm PSNPs, BSA stabilized 20 nm PSNPs more effectively, whereas TRY destabilized 20 nm PSNPs more effectively, indicating that the smaller PSNPs (20 nm) were more susceptible to the co-occurrence of proteins. This work highlighted the necessity of accounting for the protein type and particle size when evaluating the aggregation state and potential risk of emerging nanoplastics in aquatic systems.
AB - Nanoplastic contamination is one of the pressing environmental concerns globally. Among many environmental factors in aquatic systems, ubiquitous proteins are expected to affect the physicochemical properties of nanoplastics and subsequently influence their fate, transport, and toxicity. Here, time-resolved dynamic light scattering was used to investigate the comparative effects of negatively charged bovine serum albumin (BSA) and positively charged bovine trypsin (TRY) on polystyrene nanoplastic (PSNP) aggregation. The critical coagulation concentrations (NaCl) of 20 and 100 nm PSNPs decreased from 311 and 361 mM to 10 and 43 mM after interacting with TRY, respectively, mainly due to the additional electrostatic attractive force and intramolecular bridging. The attachment efficiencies of BSA-PSNP conjugates decreased from 1 to 0 with increasing electrolyte concentration, suggesting that the patch-charge attractive force may be screened by steric repulsion. At a relatively high level of protein (>10 mg L−1), PSNPs remained stable in BSA solution, but aggregated quickly in TRY solution. Results clearly showed that the aggregation of nanoplastics was highly related to the electrical charge of the proteins. Compared with 100 nm PSNPs, BSA stabilized 20 nm PSNPs more effectively, whereas TRY destabilized 20 nm PSNPs more effectively, indicating that the smaller PSNPs (20 nm) were more susceptible to the co-occurrence of proteins. This work highlighted the necessity of accounting for the protein type and particle size when evaluating the aggregation state and potential risk of emerging nanoplastics in aquatic systems.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85107788715
U2 - 10.1039/d1en00115a
DO - 10.1039/d1en00115a
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85107788715
SN - 2051-8153
VL - 8
SP - 1560
EP - 1570
JO - Environmental Science: Nano
JF - Environmental Science: Nano
IS - 6
ER -