Standardized methods are essential for generating reliable and reproducible data to support risk assessment and decision-making related to soil contamination by environmental pollutants, including nanoplastics (NPs). This study evaluated the ability of the RHIZOtest method, a standardized soil-plant exposure system, in providing a high-throughput testing platform for investigating NP phytoavailability. As a proof of concept, tomato plants were exposed to artificial soil spiked with model NPs at concentrations of 400 and 4000 mg kg−1 dm. Palladium (Pd)-doped polystyrene particles (PS-P) (a Z-average diameter of 210 nm, a surface charge zeta potential of −45.20 ± 032 mV, a polydispersity index of 0.1, and a Pd doping ratio of 0.295% w/w Pd to PS-P) were used as surrogates for NPs. Pd content was measured as a proxy for quantifying PS-P uptake. After eight days of exposure, Pd was detected in both the roots and shoots of plants grown on both spiked soils, confirming PS-P uptake and translocation. On average, 5 ± 1% of the spiked PS-P were taken up by the plants across spiking levels. Root concentration factors varied slightly between the lower and higher levels (31 ± 2% and 24 ± 3%, respectively), while translocation factors remained similar (∼25%). Root biomass was significantly reduced compared to controls, suggesting possible concentration-dependent PS-P rhizotoxicity. Notably, the limited variability in concentration values measured in roots (±11%) and shoots (±23%), along with near-complete mass balance recovery (97-100%), demonstrated the reliability of the RHIZOtest in accurately and consistently quantifying NP uptake while accounting for rhizosphere processes.

A standardized soil-based biotest to investigate the phytoavailability of nanoplastics

Beggio, Giovanni;Ndiforngu, Ateh Suh Nkwekeu;Sandon, Annalisa;Lavagnolo, Maria Cristina
2025

Abstract

Standardized methods are essential for generating reliable and reproducible data to support risk assessment and decision-making related to soil contamination by environmental pollutants, including nanoplastics (NPs). This study evaluated the ability of the RHIZOtest method, a standardized soil-plant exposure system, in providing a high-throughput testing platform for investigating NP phytoavailability. As a proof of concept, tomato plants were exposed to artificial soil spiked with model NPs at concentrations of 400 and 4000 mg kg−1 dm. Palladium (Pd)-doped polystyrene particles (PS-P) (a Z-average diameter of 210 nm, a surface charge zeta potential of −45.20 ± 032 mV, a polydispersity index of 0.1, and a Pd doping ratio of 0.295% w/w Pd to PS-P) were used as surrogates for NPs. Pd content was measured as a proxy for quantifying PS-P uptake. After eight days of exposure, Pd was detected in both the roots and shoots of plants grown on both spiked soils, confirming PS-P uptake and translocation. On average, 5 ± 1% of the spiked PS-P were taken up by the plants across spiking levels. Root concentration factors varied slightly between the lower and higher levels (31 ± 2% and 24 ± 3%, respectively), while translocation factors remained similar (∼25%). Root biomass was significantly reduced compared to controls, suggesting possible concentration-dependent PS-P rhizotoxicity. Notably, the limited variability in concentration values measured in roots (±11%) and shoots (±23%), along with near-complete mass balance recovery (97-100%), demonstrated the reliability of the RHIZOtest in accurately and consistently quantifying NP uptake while accounting for rhizosphere processes.
2025
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3567465
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