Physical Evidence of Oil Uptake and Toxicity Assessment of Amphiphilic Grafted Nanoparticles Used as Oil Dispersants.

Environ Sci Technol

Department of Physiological Sciences and Center for Environmental and Human Toxicology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611, United States.

Published: June 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates the toxicity of a new type of dispersant made from silicon dioxide nanoparticles (NPs) that are modified with specific chemical compounds to improve their effectiveness.
  • This new dispersant, called NP-PCL-POEGMA, is compared to a previously evaluated dispersant (NP-HPG) to observe improvements in protecting fish embryos from crude oil toxicity.
  • Findings show that the NP-PCL-POEGMA samples were non-toxic to embryos and provided better protection against harmful effects than the previous dispersant, suggesting potential for safer alternatives to commercial products like Corexit.

Article Abstract

Herein, we report the toxicity evaluation of a new prototype dispersant system, silicon dioxide nanoparticles (NPs) functionalized with (3-glycidoxypropyl)triethoxysilane (GPS) and grafted poly(ε-caprolactone)--poly[oligo(ethylene glycol)methyl methacrylate mono-methyl ether] (NP-PCL-POEGMA). This serves as a follow up of our previous study where grafted silicon dioxide NPs functionalized with GPS and grafted hyperbranched poly(glycidol) (NP-HPG) were evaluated for reducing the toxicity in embryo, juvenile, and adult fish populations. In this study, the NP-HPG sample is used as a baseline to compare against the new NP-PCL-POEGMA samples. The relative size was established for three NP-PCL-POEGMA samples via cryogenic transmission electron microscopy. A quantitative mortality study determined that these NPs are non-toxic to embryo populations. An ethoxyresorufin-O-deethylase assay was performed on these NP-PCL-POEGMA samples to test for reduced cytochrome P450 1A after the embryos were exposed to the water-accommodated fraction of crude oil. Overall, these NP-PCL-POEGMA NPs better protected the embryo populations than the previous NP-HPG sample (using a protein activity end point), showing a trend in the right direction for prototype dispersants to replace the commercially utilized Corexit.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9227714PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.1c08564DOI Listing

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