Tracking relevant nanomaterial transformations, exposure, uptake and effects in freshwater and soil systems

Lead Research Organisation: University of Exeter
Department Name: Biosciences

Abstract

Nanomaterials (NM) are very small particles much less than the width of a human hair. They are synthesised to provide different properties from larger forms of the same material and they are now used in a wide range of products. The properties that NMs provide include enhanced strength, an ability to reflect light or to react with other chemicals, and efficient electrical conductance. The value of NM is now very widely recognised and many companies are starting to use them in common consumer products, such as sunscreens and cosmetics, plus industry products, such as fabrics and building materials. This means that small quantities of NMs will reach the wider environment from everyday product use.

A great deal of recent research has gone into assessing the safety of NMs for humans and the environment. Most of these studies have looked at NMs in their newly-manufactured forms. It is increasingly apparent, however, that once NMs are released into the wider environment, they do not stay in their manufactured state - they change or 'transform'. Transformations can affect NM size, charge, their surface coatings and their ability to bind to other things such as soil particles or other chemicals. Transformations occur both during transfer to the environment (e.g. via sewage works) and once NMs reach the wider environment itself (rivers, sediments and soils). It is of huge importance that we understand the transformation processes and environmental fate(s) of NMs as they can affect their toxicity to humans and the environment.

The aim of this project is to study these NM transformations in more detail. We want to better understand whether different types of NMs are transformed in the same or different ways. We will conduct our work with different types of NMs, including those made from silver, titanium dioxide, polystyrene (a type of plastic) and graphene (a type of carbon).

We will first use laboratory methods that mimic the ways that NMs are changed during sewage treatment and in natural waters and soils to create the transformed materials that we will then study. We will test how these new and changed NMs affect a range of common aquatic and soil organisms and contrasting their toxicity in their "pristine" state with that after they have been transformed in the environment for different times. During our tests, we will measure how much of each material is taken up by the organisms into different tissues and whether this affects how they grow and reproduce. We will also measure the activity of different genes that are likely to be affected as organisms take up different NMs. We predict that each NM will be transformed in a way that changes its likelihood to cause harmful effects. Each test will be repeated using different soils and waters typically found across the UK, to determine how transformations vary under different conditions.

Finally, we will build custom-made, large exposure systems ('mesocosms') designed to mimic the rivers into which sewage works discharged and soils upon which sludge is spread, and populate them with a wide range of common UK native plants, invertebrates and fish (in the waters). By following these mesocosms for several months, we can simulate what may actually be happening in real UK environments in terms of the fate and effects of our transformed NMs. We will use the results to improve models able to predict how our transformed NMs will behave and the effects they will have. Taken together, our results should help us to predict the toxicity of NMs to help assure their safety, supporting the growth of the nanotechnology industry into the future. To this latter end we will run and coordinate a UK Nano-Academics & Regulators Platform, and will also present our results through major European Union (NanoSafety Cluster) and worldwide (Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Discussion) policy working groups, as well as to the public, so reaching as wide an audience as possible.

Planned Impact

Given the global economic importance of the nanotechnology industry - currently in $ billions worldwide - our findings will be of considerable interest (inter)nationally to a wide range of industries, government regulatory bodies, environmental protection groups and the general public. The major part of our impact activities will be centred on engagement with national and international government regulatory bodies, industry partners, and informing the wider public, as well as on training and incorporating outcomes into higher education.
Our work will benefit regulators and industry by delivering advanced understanding of realistic environment fate and effects of nanomaterials. This knowledge will focus on the mitigation of highly reactive nanomaterial surfaces afforded by environmental transformations, through detailed comparison of the bioaccumulation and toxicity of the pristine and environmentally-transformed forms under realistic chemistries and concentrations. Protocols, methods and models for assessing nanomaterials environmental transformations, and their effects on toxicity will be an outcome of our work. The central dissemination component for this information will be the UK Nano-Academics & Regulators Platform, which has been initiated by UoB and CEH over the last year with support from Defra, EA and CEFAS, and which will be formalised and secured via this project. The 6-monthly meetings of this group over the 3 year project will allow 2-way communication between regulators and academics/industry, facilitating coordination of UK responses to OECD and other international activity, briefing of the academic community of upcoming impact opportunities/research needs, and allowing the academics to relay relevant research outcomes directly to policy makers. This activity will be supplemented if applicable, a joint science-workshop with any other project(s) funded via the Highlight Topic call.
The applicants have considerable experience of commercial engagement via EU consortia, CASE studentships, the NERC-nanoKTN, and KTP and LINK awards with various industry partners. The project team also has a strong track record in actively supporting UK and international governments for screening and testing guidelines, including for nanomaterials, and policy development via a number of routes (e.g. Defra reports, ECHA workshops, OECD test guidelines, European Food Safety Authority, EU Nanosafety cluster). All of these links will provide conduits for knowledge sharing and for creating impact with industry and government bodies.
Results of this work are expected to make a significant scientific impact and major routes for scientific dissemination will be via relevant, high impact ISI scientific journals, and national and international conferences and workshops. The applicants will also disseminate knowledge from this research work via the press (through the CEH & NERC Press Office), to industry and regulators, and into higher education (UoB and UoEx directly, but invited lectures e.g. Oxford nano-summerschool). For wider public disseminations, we will run a two-day public outreach activity, which will include opportunities to view the soil mesocosm experiments, as well as, interactive sessions on the benefits and opportunities of nanomaterials and challenges in detecting nanomaterials in the environment.
The researchers on this project will be provided with the opportunity to develop their awareness of, and skills in, knowledge transfer, designating major roles for the project researchers in the UK Nano-Academics & Regulators Platform, and the outreach activities, as well as in science communication. The participating laboratories have impressive records in employment for their researchers that include permanent positions in academia (both nationally and internationally), and within various industries and government agencies. Our continued development of skilled staff for UK PLC will be a major impact of our project work.
 
Description We have been finding out more about the risks that nanomaterials may pose when they are discarded into the environment after use. This includes the surface transformations that they undergo as they pass through wastewater systems, interacting with other substances and contaminants on the way.

Our results to date have shown that surface interactions can radically change the internal distribution of nanoparticles once they are ingested by aquatic species. For example, using early lifestage oysters, we were able to show that metal oxide nanomaterials are more likely to be taken up across the gut when coated with certain organic materials. The organic materials also mitigated their toxicity, for example by reducing their ability to induce oxidative stress.

To explore this further, we set up a model system using oyster embryos to test the so-called 'Bandgap hypothesis', in which the toxicity of metal oxide nanomaterials is predicted based on the potential for electron transfer between metal atoms on the particle surface and toxicity targets in cells. We found that the sorption capacity of the particles and their interaction with organic matter in seawater was able to override the Bandgap width, emphasising that for particle toxicity, it's the surface that counts the most.

Further yet to be published studies are exploring the surface interactions of nanopolystyrene with organic matter to determine how this influences toxicity.
Exploitation Route It is important to understand how nanomaterials interact with other materials in the environment and how this changes their fate, behaviour and effects, so that adequate risk assessments can be performed. This enables the nano-industry to grow in a safe manner as materials can be designed to reduce potential adverse effects, effectively 'designing out' harmful impacts at the design stage.
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Chemicals,Construction,Environment

 
Description Results on the risk assessment of nanomaterials in the environment were used to inform a recent government POST note on the Risk assessment of nanomaterials file:///C:/Users/Tamara/Downloads/POST-PN-0562.pdf. Results on the risk assessment of nanoplastics and their transformations in the environment were used to inform a recent workshop event at BAS on March 7th 2018 on Solutions for plastics in the Oceans bas.ac.uk/event/plastics-in-the-ocean-challenges-and-solutions/. Most recently, results on the fate and distribution of nanoplastics in the environment has been used to inform input into the Policy Connect Zero Waste report to government containing 16 policy recommendations to government on how to reduce plastic reaching the waste stream. https://www.policyconnect.org.uk/research/plastic-packaging-plan-achieving-zero-waste-exports. The team has won several awards in the last year for Research with Outstanding Societal Impact.
First Year Of Impact 2017
Sector Agriculture, Food and Drink,Environment,Manufacturing, including Industrial Biotechology
Impact Types Societal,Policy & public services

 
Description Gave evidence to a government review, POST note on Trends in the Environment
Geographic Reach National 
Policy Influence Type Citation in other policy documents
Impact Identifies marine microplastics as an internationally important emerging issue of environmental concern for policymakers, cites our papers as evidence
URL http://researchbriefings.parliament.uk/ResearchBriefing/Summary/POST-PN-0516
 
Description Exploring the nanoscale surface interactions of microplastics in natural waters
Amount £140,000 (GBP)
Organisation University of Queensland 
Sector Academic/University
Country Australia
Start 01/2019 
End 01/2023
 
Description Synergistic impact of nanoplastic and ocean acidification in the Southern Ocean marine ecosystem
Amount £140,000 (GBP)
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2018 
End 09/2022
 
Description Invitation to participate in NSF funded collaborative activity 
Organisation Brown University
Department NSF/EPSCoR Proteomics Shared Resource Facility
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Rhode Island, contribution and attendance at a Brown University Workshop April 2017 funded through the NSF Experimental Programme to stimulate Competitive Research.
Collaborator Contribution I will contribute talks and as a panellist at the workshop on 'How climate change and environmental stressors impact marine ecosystems' in April at Brown University, reporting on our preliminary results on nanoplastics environmental impacts
Impact none yet, still ongoing
Start Year 2016
 
Description Invitation to participate in NSF funded collaborative activity 
Organisation Brown University
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Rhode Island, contribution and attendance at a Brown University Workshop April 2017 funded through the NSF Experimental Programme to stimulate Competitive Research.
Collaborator Contribution I will contribute talks and as a panellist at the workshop on 'How climate change and environmental stressors impact marine ecosystems' in April at Brown University, reporting on our preliminary results on nanoplastics environmental impacts
Impact none yet, still ongoing
Start Year 2016
 
Description Invitation to participate in NSF funded collaborative activity 
Organisation Brown University
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Rhode Island, contribution and attendance at a Brown University Workshop April 2017 funded through the NSF Experimental Programme to stimulate Competitive Research.
Collaborator Contribution I will contribute talks and as a panellist at the workshop on 'How climate change and environmental stressors impact marine ecosystems' in April at Brown University, reporting on our preliminary results on nanoplastics environmental impacts
Impact none yet, still ongoing
Start Year 2016
 
Description JPI Oceans 
Organisation SINTEF
Department Sintef Materials And Chemistry
Country Norway 
Sector Multiple 
PI Contribution We are associate partners in a consortium funded through the JPI Oceans international initiative, called Plastox: Direct and indirect ecotoxicological impacts of microplastics on marine organisms. The UK funder, DEFRA, was not able to offer any funding for us to be officially funded, hence we are associate partners only. We benefit from access to researcher exchange visits and exchange of data and scientific results with the rest of the consortium. http://www.jpi-oceans.eu/news-events/news/results-%E2%82%AC75-million-call-microplastics-published I am also on the strategic advisory board for another of these projects Ephamare (see the website).
Collaborator Contribution they offer funded training and research visits to their laboratories, also access to shared reagents, expertise and facilities
Impact none yet
Start Year 2016
 
Description Giving evidence at an Environmental Audit Committee Select Committee on toxic substances 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact The Environmental Audit Committee has launched an inquiry into the impact of toxic chemicals in everyday life on human health and the environment. The inquiry focuses on how toxic chemicals are used in everyday products, such as furniture, food and toys, current government regulation of these substances, and the environmental and human health problems associated with them. I am giving evidence to the enquiry as an expert on March 26th 2019.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
URL https://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/commons-select/environmental-audit-comm...
 
Description I attended the Royal Society of Chemistry Environmental Nanoscience Initiative event on 10th December 2015 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact I attended the Royal Society of Chemistry Environmental Nanoscience Initiative event on 10th December 2015. This was designed to showcase the grants funded under the scheme and engage with the nanoindustry community
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
 
Description Talk at Brown University, USA 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Invited plenary talk to mark the initiation of an NSF funded programme to promote competitive interdisiplinary research in environmental and human health research
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
URL https://web.uri.edu/rinsfepscor/2017/04/25/tracking-tiny-bits-plastic/
 
Description Zero Plastic Waste Policy Connect event at Westminster 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact I spoke as an invited expert at an event to launch the influential report on 'Plastic Packaging Plan: achieving zero 'waste' exports' produced by the Policy Connect cross-party think tank. This event was held in the Jubilee Rooms at the Houses of Parliament on February 12th 2019, and was attended by a wide range of stakeholders, MPs, industry groups and NGOs. It provides a series of recommendations to government and society on how to achieve zero waste of plastics. It calls for the implementation of new policies so UK plastic becomes a circular industrial resource, rather than exportable waste or environmental pollution. The report contains 18 policy recommendations needed to develop a national Plastic Packaging Plan by 2030.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
URL https://www.policyconnect.org.uk/research/plastic-packaging-plan-achieving-zero-waste-exports
 
Description interview on BBC News at 10 and BBC World News 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact I gave an interview to the BBC News team to coincide with the introduction of a charge on plastic bags, describing the research being conducted under this grant
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
URL http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-34415464
 
Description presenting at the BAS Plastics in the ocean solutions event 7th March 2018 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact Workshop to present the state of the science and to discuss solutions to plastic waste and marine litter pollution
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
URL https://www.bas.ac.uk/event/plastics-in-the-ocean-challenges-and-solutions/