TY - JOUR
T1 - Irreversible Immune Dysfunction in Earthworms from MoS2Nanosheet Exposure
T2 - Implications for Nanoenabled Agricultural Sustainability
AU - Sun, Kailun
AU - White, Jason C.
AU - Lynch, Iseult
AU - Zhang, Peng
AU - He, Erkai
AU - Peijnenburg, Willie J.G.M.
AU - Qiu, Hao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 American Chemical Society
PY - 2026/2/3
Y1 - 2026/2/3
N2 - Nano-MoS2 is emerging as a promising agricultural nanomaterial. However, nanoenabled agriculture must balance the proposed benefits with potential risks associated with material incorporation into soil matrices. This work establishes a full-process risk assessment profile for MoS2 encompassing precursor particles, exfoliated nanosheets, and dissolved ionic species using the soil invertebrate Eisenia fetida under exposure-recovery cycles. The results showed that although precursor MoS2 exposure at 5–50 mg Mo/kg for 7 days significantly activated (p < 0.001) earthworm lumbrokinase (9.4%), antimicrobial peptide (10.2–14.0%), and hemolysin (11.9%) levels compared to the control, the biota exhibited transient immune memory and persistence upon another 7 days of recovery. Once exfoliated to nanosheet form at a consistent 5–50 mg Mo/kg dose range, more pronounced ion release (3.8–6.4%) and prolonged in vivo accumulation (43.9–55.4% excluded) of MoS2 nanosheets mediated persistent immune-related gene initiation. Importantly, the filamentous extension of external DNA between immune cells and deterministic clustering of endosymbiotic microbial communities were shown to collaboratively establish the in vivo homeostasis after MoS2 nanosheet exposure. These findings mechanistically demonstrate the persistent stress on soil invertebrate immune systems under MoS2 nanosheet exposure and highlight the need to link nanoenabled agriculture to soil eco-sustainability.
AB - Nano-MoS2 is emerging as a promising agricultural nanomaterial. However, nanoenabled agriculture must balance the proposed benefits with potential risks associated with material incorporation into soil matrices. This work establishes a full-process risk assessment profile for MoS2 encompassing precursor particles, exfoliated nanosheets, and dissolved ionic species using the soil invertebrate Eisenia fetida under exposure-recovery cycles. The results showed that although precursor MoS2 exposure at 5–50 mg Mo/kg for 7 days significantly activated (p < 0.001) earthworm lumbrokinase (9.4%), antimicrobial peptide (10.2–14.0%), and hemolysin (11.9%) levels compared to the control, the biota exhibited transient immune memory and persistence upon another 7 days of recovery. Once exfoliated to nanosheet form at a consistent 5–50 mg Mo/kg dose range, more pronounced ion release (3.8–6.4%) and prolonged in vivo accumulation (43.9–55.4% excluded) of MoS2 nanosheets mediated persistent immune-related gene initiation. Importantly, the filamentous extension of external DNA between immune cells and deterministic clustering of endosymbiotic microbial communities were shown to collaboratively establish the in vivo homeostasis after MoS2 nanosheet exposure. These findings mechanistically demonstrate the persistent stress on soil invertebrate immune systems under MoS2 nanosheet exposure and highlight the need to link nanoenabled agriculture to soil eco-sustainability.
KW - MoSnanosheets
KW - immune
KW - nanoenabled agriculture
KW - risk
KW - soil fauna
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105029369528
U2 - 10.1021/acs.est.5c14710
DO - 10.1021/acs.est.5c14710
M3 - 文章
C2 - 41543986
AN - SCOPUS:105029369528
SN - 0013-936X
VL - 60
SP - 3093
EP - 3106
JO - Environmental Science and Technology
JF - Environmental Science and Technology
IS - 4
ER -