Nik Nurhidayu Nik Mut, Zhihan Cao, Joorim Na, Ali Yuzir, Knut Erik Tollefsen, Jinho Jung
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From this network, a linear AOP was selected and qualitatively evaluated using Bradford Hill criteria to assess causal linkages. The weight-of-evidence assessment revealed strong support for early and midstream key event relationships, whereas downstream relationships remained weakly substantiated, highlighting critical knowledge gaps. Importantly, this review emphasizes the need to adapt the classical definition of the MIE for non-chemical particulate stressors such as microplastics. We propose that the initial mechanistic interaction occurring at epithelial surfaces represents the putative MIE for microplastic toxicity in aquatic organisms. Overall, this review applies the AOP framework as a qualitative tool to organize mechanistic evidence of microplastic toxicity. By capturing the cascading effects of microplastic exposure across biological levels, the proposed AOP network provides a structured basis for predictive ecotoxicological assessment and supports the development of regulatory risk management strategies for microplastic pollution in aquatic ecosystems.","PeriodicalId":248,"journal":{"name":"Aquatic Toxicology","volume":"21 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":4.3000,"publicationDate":"2025-10-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Adverse outcome pathway networks of microplastic ecotoxicity to aquatic organisms: A critical review\",\"authors\":\"Nik Nurhidayu Nik Mut, Zhihan Cao, Joorim Na, Ali Yuzir, Knut Erik Tollefsen, Jinho Jung\",\"doi\":\"10.1016/j.aquatox.2025.107594\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Numerous studies have documented the ecotoxicity of microplastics in aquatic organisms, yet the mechanistic pathways linking early molecular disturbances to higher-level biological outcomes remain poorly understood. 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Adverse outcome pathway networks of microplastic ecotoxicity to aquatic organisms: A critical review
Numerous studies have documented the ecotoxicity of microplastics in aquatic organisms, yet the mechanistic pathways linking early molecular disturbances to higher-level biological outcomes remain poorly understood. In this paper, we conducted a comprehensive multi-level ecotoxicological review integrated with automated text-mining using AOP-helpFinder 3.0. This approach retrieved confidence scores for stressor–event and event–event relationships, enabling systematic identification of candidate molecular initiating events (MIEs), key events (KEs), and adverse outcomes (AOs). A putative adverse outcome pathway (AOP) network was then constructed, anchored on susceptible tissues (gill, gut, liver/gonad, and brain) and incorporating downstream cascades of interlinked KEs. From this network, a linear AOP was selected and qualitatively evaluated using Bradford Hill criteria to assess causal linkages. The weight-of-evidence assessment revealed strong support for early and midstream key event relationships, whereas downstream relationships remained weakly substantiated, highlighting critical knowledge gaps. Importantly, this review emphasizes the need to adapt the classical definition of the MIE for non-chemical particulate stressors such as microplastics. We propose that the initial mechanistic interaction occurring at epithelial surfaces represents the putative MIE for microplastic toxicity in aquatic organisms. Overall, this review applies the AOP framework as a qualitative tool to organize mechanistic evidence of microplastic toxicity. By capturing the cascading effects of microplastic exposure across biological levels, the proposed AOP network provides a structured basis for predictive ecotoxicological assessment and supports the development of regulatory risk management strategies for microplastic pollution in aquatic ecosystems.
期刊介绍:
Aquatic Toxicology publishes significant contributions that increase the understanding of the impact of harmful substances (including natural and synthetic chemicals) on aquatic organisms and ecosystems.
Aquatic Toxicology considers both laboratory and field studies with a focus on marine/ freshwater environments. We strive to attract high quality original scientific papers, critical reviews and expert opinion papers in the following areas: Effects of harmful substances on molecular, cellular, sub-organismal, organismal, population, community, and ecosystem level; Toxic Mechanisms; Genetic disturbances, transgenerational effects, behavioral and adaptive responses; Impacts of harmful substances on structure, function of and services provided by aquatic ecosystems; Mixture toxicity assessment; Statistical approaches to predict exposure to and hazards of contaminants
The journal also considers manuscripts in other areas, such as the development of innovative concepts, approaches, and methodologies, which promote the wider application of toxicological datasets to the protection of aquatic environments and inform ecological risk assessments and decision making by relevant authorities.