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Nanoplastic Aggregation Driven by Environmental Components Reshapes Hormone Signaling and Energy Metabolism in

PubMed · 2026-04-12

Tiny plastic particles in soil rarely act alone — they clump together with natural organic compounds and metal ions like calcium, forming aggregates that are far more disruptive to plants than isolated nanoplastics. This study shows those real-world plastic clusters alter how plants regulate growth hormones and produce energy, raising concerns that lab safety tests underestimate actual risk.

1

Polystyrene nanoplastics aggregated significantly in the presence of dissolved organic matter and calcium ions, changing their surface properties and increasing their biological impact on plants.

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Nanoplastic aggregates disrupted plant hormone signaling pathways, interfering with the chemical signals that regulate growth, stress responses, and development.

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Energy metabolism in plants was altered by aggregate exposure, suggesting that real-world nanoplastic mixtures are more phytotoxic than isolated particles studied in standard lab conditions.