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Trophic transfer of silver nanoparticles shifts metabolism in snails and reduces food safety

Authors :
Fei Dang
Chengcheng Li
Luís M. Nunes
Ronggui Tang
Junsong Wang
Shuofei Dong
Willie J.G.M. Peijnenburg
Wenxiong Wang
Baoshan Xing
Su Shiung Lam
Christian Sonne
Source :
Environment International, Vol 176, Iss , Pp 107990- (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2023.

Abstract

Food security and sustainable development of agriculture has been a key challenge for decades. To support this, nanotechnology in the agricultural sectors increases productivity and food security, while leaving complex environmental negative impacts including pollution of the human food chains by nanoparticles. Here we model the effects of silver nanoparticles (Ag-NPs) in a food chain consisting of soil-grown lettuce Lactuca sativa and snail Achatina fulica. Soil-grown lettuce were exposed to sulfurized Ag-NPs via root or metallic Ag-NPs via leaves before fed to snails. We discover an important biomagnification of silver in snails sourced from plant root uptake, with trophic transfer factors of 2.0–5.9 in soft tissues. NPs shifts from original size (55–68 nm) toward much smaller size (17–26 nm) in snails. Trophic transfer of Ag-NPs reprograms the global metabolic profile by down-regulating or up-regulating metabolites for up to 0.25- or 4.20- fold, respectively, relative to the control. These metabolites control osmoregulation, phospholipid, energy, and amino acid metabolism in snails, reflecting molecular pathways of biomagnification and pontential adverse biological effects on lower trophic levels. Consumption of these Ag-NP contaminated snails causes non-carcinogenic effects on human health. Global public health risks decrease by 72% under foliar Ag-NP application in agriculture or through a reduction in the consumption of snails sourced from root application. The latter strategy is at the expense of domestic economic losses in food security of $177.3 and $58.3 million annually for countries such as Nigeria and Cameroon. Foliar Ag-NP application in nano-agriculture has lower hazard quotient risks on public health than root application to ensure global food safety, as brought forward by the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01604120
Volume :
176
Issue :
107990-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Environment International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.512fe45730b492f9b8818f6fb3d72a4
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2023.107990