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Low Concentrations of Silver Nanoparticles in Biosolids Cause Adverse Ecosystem Responses under Realistic Field Scenario

A large fraction of engineered nanomaterials in consumer and commercial products will reach natural ecosystems. To date, research on the biological impacts of environmental nanomaterial exposures has largely focused on high-concentration exposures in mechanistic lab studies with single strains of mo...

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Autores principales: Colman, Benjamin P., Arnaout, Christina L., Anciaux, Sarah, Gunsch, Claudia K., Hochella, Michael F., Kim, Bojeong, Lowry, Gregory V., McGill, Bonnie M., Reinsch, Brian C., Richardson, Curtis J., Unrine, Jason M., Wright, Justin P., Yin, Liyan, Bernhardt, Emily S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3584129/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23468930
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057189
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author Colman, Benjamin P.
Arnaout, Christina L.
Anciaux, Sarah
Gunsch, Claudia K.
Hochella, Michael F.
Kim, Bojeong
Lowry, Gregory V.
McGill, Bonnie M.
Reinsch, Brian C.
Richardson, Curtis J.
Unrine, Jason M.
Wright, Justin P.
Yin, Liyan
Bernhardt, Emily S.
author_facet Colman, Benjamin P.
Arnaout, Christina L.
Anciaux, Sarah
Gunsch, Claudia K.
Hochella, Michael F.
Kim, Bojeong
Lowry, Gregory V.
McGill, Bonnie M.
Reinsch, Brian C.
Richardson, Curtis J.
Unrine, Jason M.
Wright, Justin P.
Yin, Liyan
Bernhardt, Emily S.
author_sort Colman, Benjamin P.
collection PubMed
description A large fraction of engineered nanomaterials in consumer and commercial products will reach natural ecosystems. To date, research on the biological impacts of environmental nanomaterial exposures has largely focused on high-concentration exposures in mechanistic lab studies with single strains of model organisms. These results are difficult to extrapolate to ecosystems, where exposures will likely be at low-concentrations and which are inhabited by a diversity of organisms. Here we show adverse responses of plants and microorganisms in a replicated long-term terrestrial mesocosm field experiment following a single low dose of silver nanoparticles (0.14 mg Ag kg(−1) soil) applied via a likely route of exposure, sewage biosolid application. While total aboveground plant biomass did not differ between treatments receiving biosolids, one plant species, Microstegium vimeneum, had 32 % less biomass in the Slurry+AgNP treatment relative to the Slurry only treatment. Microorganisms were also affected by AgNP treatment, which gave a significantly different community composition of bacteria in the Slurry+AgNPs as opposed to the Slurry treatment one day after addition as analyzed by T-RFLP analysis of 16S-rRNA genes. After eight days, N(2)O flux was 4.5 fold higher in the Slurry+AgNPs treatment than the Slurry treatment. After fifty days, community composition and N(2)O flux of the Slurry+AgNPs treatment converged with the Slurry. However, the soil microbial extracellular enzymes leucine amino peptidase and phosphatase had 52 and 27% lower activities, respectively, while microbial biomass was 35% lower than the Slurry. We also show that the magnitude of these responses was in all cases as large as or larger than the positive control, AgNO(3), added at 4-fold the Ag concentration of the silver nanoparticles.
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spelling pubmed-35841292013-03-06 Low Concentrations of Silver Nanoparticles in Biosolids Cause Adverse Ecosystem Responses under Realistic Field Scenario Colman, Benjamin P. Arnaout, Christina L. Anciaux, Sarah Gunsch, Claudia K. Hochella, Michael F. Kim, Bojeong Lowry, Gregory V. McGill, Bonnie M. Reinsch, Brian C. Richardson, Curtis J. Unrine, Jason M. Wright, Justin P. Yin, Liyan Bernhardt, Emily S. PLoS One Research Article A large fraction of engineered nanomaterials in consumer and commercial products will reach natural ecosystems. To date, research on the biological impacts of environmental nanomaterial exposures has largely focused on high-concentration exposures in mechanistic lab studies with single strains of model organisms. These results are difficult to extrapolate to ecosystems, where exposures will likely be at low-concentrations and which are inhabited by a diversity of organisms. Here we show adverse responses of plants and microorganisms in a replicated long-term terrestrial mesocosm field experiment following a single low dose of silver nanoparticles (0.14 mg Ag kg(−1) soil) applied via a likely route of exposure, sewage biosolid application. While total aboveground plant biomass did not differ between treatments receiving biosolids, one plant species, Microstegium vimeneum, had 32 % less biomass in the Slurry+AgNP treatment relative to the Slurry only treatment. Microorganisms were also affected by AgNP treatment, which gave a significantly different community composition of bacteria in the Slurry+AgNPs as opposed to the Slurry treatment one day after addition as analyzed by T-RFLP analysis of 16S-rRNA genes. After eight days, N(2)O flux was 4.5 fold higher in the Slurry+AgNPs treatment than the Slurry treatment. After fifty days, community composition and N(2)O flux of the Slurry+AgNPs treatment converged with the Slurry. However, the soil microbial extracellular enzymes leucine amino peptidase and phosphatase had 52 and 27% lower activities, respectively, while microbial biomass was 35% lower than the Slurry. We also show that the magnitude of these responses was in all cases as large as or larger than the positive control, AgNO(3), added at 4-fold the Ag concentration of the silver nanoparticles. Public Library of Science 2013-02-27 /pmc/articles/PMC3584129/ /pubmed/23468930 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057189 Text en © 2013 Colman et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Colman, Benjamin P.
Arnaout, Christina L.
Anciaux, Sarah
Gunsch, Claudia K.
Hochella, Michael F.
Kim, Bojeong
Lowry, Gregory V.
McGill, Bonnie M.
Reinsch, Brian C.
Richardson, Curtis J.
Unrine, Jason M.
Wright, Justin P.
Yin, Liyan
Bernhardt, Emily S.
Low Concentrations of Silver Nanoparticles in Biosolids Cause Adverse Ecosystem Responses under Realistic Field Scenario
title Low Concentrations of Silver Nanoparticles in Biosolids Cause Adverse Ecosystem Responses under Realistic Field Scenario
title_full Low Concentrations of Silver Nanoparticles in Biosolids Cause Adverse Ecosystem Responses under Realistic Field Scenario
title_fullStr Low Concentrations of Silver Nanoparticles in Biosolids Cause Adverse Ecosystem Responses under Realistic Field Scenario
title_full_unstemmed Low Concentrations of Silver Nanoparticles in Biosolids Cause Adverse Ecosystem Responses under Realistic Field Scenario
title_short Low Concentrations of Silver Nanoparticles in Biosolids Cause Adverse Ecosystem Responses under Realistic Field Scenario
title_sort low concentrations of silver nanoparticles in biosolids cause adverse ecosystem responses under realistic field scenario
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3584129/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23468930
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057189
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