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Brand-Specific Toxicity of Tire Tread Particles Helps Identify the Determinants of Toxicity.

Jing DingMin LvQiaoning WangDong ZhuQing-Lin ChenXiao-Qiang LiChang-Ping YuXiangrong XuLingxin ChenYong-Guan Zhu
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2023)
The widespread occurrence of tire tread particles (TPs) has aroused increasing concerns over their impacts. However, how they affect the soil fauna remains poorly understood. Here, based on systematically assessing the toxicity of TPs on soil model species Enchytraeus crypticus at environmentally relevant concentrations through both soil and food exposure routes, we reported that TPs affected gut microbiota, intestinal histopathology, and metabolites of the worms both through particulate- and leachate-induced effects, while TP leachates exerted stronger effects. The dominant role of TP leachates in TP toxicity was further explained by the findings that worms did not ingest TPs with a particle size of over 150 μm and actively avoided consuming TP particles. Moreover, by comparing the effects of different brands of TPs as well as new and aged TPs, we demonstrated that it was mainly TP leachates that resulted in the ubiquity of the disturbance in the worm's gut microbiota among different brands of TPs. Notably, the large variations in leachate compositions among different brands of TPs provided us a unique opportunity to identify the determinants of TP toxicity. These results provide novel insights into the toxicity of TPs to soil fauna and a reference for toxicity reduction of tires.
Keyphrases
  • oxidative stress
  • oxide nanoparticles
  • risk assessment
  • endothelial cells