Hemanta Pradhan, Arpan Poudel, Diksha Shrestha, Ariel Rogers, Michael Stewart, Amani Jereb, Jack Harper, Ming Li, Wen Zhang, Jingyi Chen, Yong Wang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Elevated levels of silver in aquatic environments arising from widespread use of silver nitrate and silver nanoparticles in different sectors of industry and medicine pose significant biophysical challenges to aquatic microorganisms. Despite extensive toxicity studies of silver on bacteria and microbial communities, its influence on other aquatic microorganisms, such as microalgae, remains poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the biophysical response of C. reinhardtii microalgae to silver ion exposure in terms of their population growth dynamics, chlorophyll content, and swimming motility. We found that silver ions at different concentrations (from 0.29 to 1.18 \(\upmu \)M) elongated the lag phase of the microalgal growth. However, the growth of the microalgae was boosted by silver ions at low concentrations (e.g., 0.29 \(\upmu \)M), showing higher OD750 values at the stationary phase and higher maximum growth rates. This hormetic response exhibited by microalgae upon exposure to silver ions indicates a nonlinear coupling between ionic stress and cellular growth. Additionally, we quantified the chlorophyll content in the microalgae with different concentrations of silver ions using spectrophotometric analysis, which revealed that the microalgae cells contained twice as high concentrations of chlorophyll when exposed to silver ions at lower concentrations. More importantly, we monitored the motion of microalgae in the presence of silver ions, detected and tracked their motion using a deep learning algorithm, and determined the effects of silver ions on the swimming motility of individual C. reinhardtii microalgae. Our results showed reduced average swimming speed and increased directional change of microalgae upon silver ion exposure.
期刊介绍:
EPJ E publishes papers describing advances in the understanding of physical aspects of Soft, Liquid and Living Systems.
Soft matter is a generic term for a large group of condensed, often heterogeneous systems -- often also called complex fluids -- that display a large response to weak external perturbations and that possess properties governed by slow internal dynamics.
Flowing matter refers to all systems that can actually flow, from simple to multiphase liquids, from foams to granular matter.
Living matter concerns the new physics that emerges from novel insights into the properties and behaviours of living systems. Furthermore, it aims at developing new concepts and quantitative approaches for the study of biological phenomena. Approaches from soft matter physics and statistical physics play a key role in this research.
The journal includes reports of experimental, computational and theoretical studies and appeals to the broad interdisciplinary communities including physics, chemistry, biology, mathematics and materials science.