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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Plant Sci.

Sec. Crop and Product Physiology

This article is part of the Research TopicQuality Formation in Horticultural Plants: Metabolic Pathways, Environmental Regulation, and Processing-Induced TransformationsView all articles

Mechanistic insights into the size-dependent bioaccumulation and phytotoxicity of polyethylene microplastics in tomato seedlings

Provisionally accepted
Yuanzhou  XuYuanzhou XuXueqing  ChenXueqing ChenYouxin  XuYouxin XuJie  LiuJie LiuWenxia  YangWenxia YangWei  WeiWei WeiBo  ZhengBo Zheng*Chunlei  LiChunlei Li*
  • Weifang University of Science and Technology, Shouguang, China

The final, formatted version of the article will be published soon.

Abstract: Microplastic contamination in agricultural soils poses a growing threat to crop health, yet the size-dependent mechanisms governing their uptake and phytotoxicity remain poorly understood. This study investigated the physiological and biochemical responses of tomato seedlings exposed to polyethylene microplastics of four distinct particle sizes at a constant mass concentration: T1 (1–2 mm), T2 (0.2–1 mm), T3 (50–200 μm), and T4 (1– 50 μm). Results showed that PE exposure significantly inhibited plant growth in a size-dependent manner. The T4 treatment (1 – 50 μ m) caused the most severe phytotoxicity, reducing shoot fresh weight by 42.3% and total root length by 55.1% compared to the control, indicating that micro-sized particles severely restrict root system expansion. This growth retardation was accompanied by aggravated oxidative stress, evidenced by a 263.4% surge in malondialdehyde content in the T4 group. The antioxidant defense system was significantly activated, with SOD, POD, and CAT activities increasing by 122.2%, 194.1%, and 177.8%, respectively. The bioaccumulation of PE in plant tissues was highly non-linear and fitted well to the Freundlich isotherm model. The uptake and mobility of MPs were strongly governed by particle size, as reflected by the bioconcentration factor and translocation factor. Both indices exhibited a sharp increase as particle size decreased: root BCF surged from 0.016 to 0.840, while TF rose from 0.125 to 0.286, confirming the exponentially higher bioavailability and upward translocation potential of micro-sized particles (T4). Physiologically, small-sized MPs (T3, T4) induced non-stomatal limitations to photosynthesis. VPA revealed a distinct mechanistic shift around a critical size threshold: while growth inhibition under large-sized MP exposure (T1, T2) was primarily driven by disruptions in IAA homeostasis, the toxicity of small-sized MPs was predominantly governed by oxidative stress responses. These findings highlight that environmental risk assessments based solely on mass concentration may underestimate the hazards of micro-sized fragments, which exert toxicity through fundamentally different physiological pathways compared to larger particles. The identified shifts in hormonal balance and oxidative status provide a valuable mechanistic framework for evaluating the potential impacts of microplastic stress on the nutritional composition and overall quality of tomato fruits in subsequent growth stages.

Keywords: Indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), Oxidative Stress, Polyethylene microplastics, Size-dependent phytotoxicity, Variance partitioning analysis

Received: 13 Jan 2026; Accepted: 04 Feb 2026.

Copyright: © 2026 Xu, Chen, Xu, Liu, Yang, Wei, Zheng and Li. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

* Correspondence:
Bo Zheng
Chunlei Li

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