Investigation into the trophic transfer and acute toxicity of phosphorus-based nano-agromaterials in Caenorhabditis elegans

2021 
Abstract Biogenic phosphorus (P) based – nanomaterials (NMs) are currently being explored as nanofertilizers. In this study, the acute toxic effects and trophic transfer of multiple types of P-based NMs were examined on soil-dwelling nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans. The study involved four variants of nanohydroxyapatites (nHAPs) synthesized either via a biogenic or a chemical route and another NM, nanophosphorus (nP), biosynthesized from bulk rock phosphate (RP). The pristine NMs differed in their physicochemical properties with each possessing different shapes (biogenic nHAP: platelet-shaped, ˜35 nm; biogenic nP, ˜5–10 nm: dots; chemically synthesized nHAPs: spherical, ˜33 nm, rod, ˜80 nm and needle-shaped, ˜64 nm). The toxic effects of NMs' in C. elegans were assessed using survival, hatching and reproductive cycle as the key endpoints in comparison to bulk controls, calcium phosphate and RP. The interactions and potential uptake of fluorescent-tagged nHAP to E. coli OP50 and C. elegans were investigated using confocal microscopy. The transformation of NMs within the nematode gut was also explored using dynamic light scattering and electron microscopy. C. elegans exposed to all of the variants of nHAP and the nP had 88–100% survival and 82–100% hatch rates and insignificant effects on brood size as observed at the tested environmentally relevant concentrations ranging from 5 to 100 μg.mL−1. Confocal microscopy confirmed the interaction and binding of fluorescent-tagged nHAP with the surface of E. coli OP50 and their trophic transfer and internalization into C. elegans. Interestingly, there was only a small reduction in the hydrodynamic diameter of the nHAP after their uptake into C. elegans and the transformed NMs did not induce any additional toxicity as evident by healthy brood sizes after 72 h. This study provides key information about the environmental safety of agriculturally relevant P-based NMs on non-target species.
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