Microplastic sampling and biological effects assessment

Reports of microplastic contaminants found in marine ecosystems and foods have increasingly raised concerns. Uptake of nanosized polystyrene was reported to affect the mortality and reproduction of marine organisms such as mussels and copepods. However, little is known about the degree of microplast...

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Main Author: Dee, Pei Fang
Other Authors: Dalton Tay Chor Yong
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76764
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-767642023-03-04T15:33:24Z Microplastic sampling and biological effects assessment Dee, Pei Fang Dalton Tay Chor Yong School of Materials Science and Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Manufacturing::Polymers and plastics Reports of microplastic contaminants found in marine ecosystems and foods have increasingly raised concerns. Uptake of nanosized polystyrene was reported to affect the mortality and reproduction of marine organisms such as mussels and copepods. However, little is known about the degree of microplastic exposure and their potential biological effects to humans. Recent in vivo tests subjecting human cerebral T98G cells, cervical epithelial HeLa cells and colon Caco-2 cells to polystyrene particles reported reactive oxygen species (ROS) effects. In this study, cell viability assays of human gastric adenocarcinoma MKN45 cells and human colon NCM460 cells showed varying cellular responses upon direct exposure to polystyrene particles of different sizes. Although NCM460 cell growth was not significantly affected, 2 days of exposure to 0.1 mg/mL polystyrene fragments of size 200 nm caused higher proliferation rate in MKN45 cells compared to 20 nm polystyrene fragments or control cell culture medium, suggesting oxidative stress-induced proliferation. Therefore, assessing the direct intake of microplastics and nanoplastics is needed for future studies on human gut exposure. To examine microplastic contamination in drinking water, a Nile Red staining procedure from literature was adapted to collect microplastics from readily available bottled drinking water. The protocol developed can be easily replicated in laboratories with fluorescence microscope. A small sampling of drinking water from 1.5-litre bottles conducted with the customised protocol confirmed the presence of trace quantities of microplastics not significantly more abundant than in indoor environment. Furthermore, two weeks of freezing to as low as -20ºC simulating freezer storage and heating bottled water at 60ºC simulating storage in hot cars caused slight deformation of plastic bottles but microplastic particles collected were similar in size distribution. No significant increases in particle quantity were observed, thus showing no increase in risks regardless of storage temperature. Bachelor of Engineering (Materials Engineering) 2019-04-09T05:44:11Z 2019-04-09T05:44:11Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76764 en Nanyang Technological University 48 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Manufacturing::Polymers and plastics
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Manufacturing::Polymers and plastics
Dee, Pei Fang
Microplastic sampling and biological effects assessment
description Reports of microplastic contaminants found in marine ecosystems and foods have increasingly raised concerns. Uptake of nanosized polystyrene was reported to affect the mortality and reproduction of marine organisms such as mussels and copepods. However, little is known about the degree of microplastic exposure and their potential biological effects to humans. Recent in vivo tests subjecting human cerebral T98G cells, cervical epithelial HeLa cells and colon Caco-2 cells to polystyrene particles reported reactive oxygen species (ROS) effects. In this study, cell viability assays of human gastric adenocarcinoma MKN45 cells and human colon NCM460 cells showed varying cellular responses upon direct exposure to polystyrene particles of different sizes. Although NCM460 cell growth was not significantly affected, 2 days of exposure to 0.1 mg/mL polystyrene fragments of size 200 nm caused higher proliferation rate in MKN45 cells compared to 20 nm polystyrene fragments or control cell culture medium, suggesting oxidative stress-induced proliferation. Therefore, assessing the direct intake of microplastics and nanoplastics is needed for future studies on human gut exposure. To examine microplastic contamination in drinking water, a Nile Red staining procedure from literature was adapted to collect microplastics from readily available bottled drinking water. The protocol developed can be easily replicated in laboratories with fluorescence microscope. A small sampling of drinking water from 1.5-litre bottles conducted with the customised protocol confirmed the presence of trace quantities of microplastics not significantly more abundant than in indoor environment. Furthermore, two weeks of freezing to as low as -20ºC simulating freezer storage and heating bottled water at 60ºC simulating storage in hot cars caused slight deformation of plastic bottles but microplastic particles collected were similar in size distribution. No significant increases in particle quantity were observed, thus showing no increase in risks regardless of storage temperature.
author2 Dalton Tay Chor Yong
author_facet Dalton Tay Chor Yong
Dee, Pei Fang
format Final Year Project
author Dee, Pei Fang
author_sort Dee, Pei Fang
title Microplastic sampling and biological effects assessment
title_short Microplastic sampling and biological effects assessment
title_full Microplastic sampling and biological effects assessment
title_fullStr Microplastic sampling and biological effects assessment
title_full_unstemmed Microplastic sampling and biological effects assessment
title_sort microplastic sampling and biological effects assessment
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76764
_version_ 1759857314935865344