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Remediation and Control Technologies
Chlorotyrosines versus Volatile Byproducts from Chlorine Disinfection During Washing of Spinach and Lettuce Yukako Komaki, Adam Michael-Anthony Simpson, Jong Kwon Choe, Michael J Plewa, and William A. Mitch Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b03005 • Publication Date (Web): 24 Jul 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on July 26, 2018
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Yukako Komaki1,2,‡, Adam M.-A. Simpson1,‡, Jong Kwon Choe3, Michael J. Plewa4, and
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William A. Mitch1, *
Chlorotyrosines versus Volatile Byproducts from Chlorine Disinfection During Washing of Spinach and Lettuce
14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37
1
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, 473 Via Ortega, Stanford, California 94305, United States
2
Present address: Graduate Division of Nutritional and Environmental Sciences, University of Shizuoka, 52-1 Yada, Suruga-ku, Shizuoka, 422-8526, Japan
3
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Institute of Construction and Environmental Engineering, Seoul National University, 1 Gwanak-ro, Gwanak-gu, Seoul 08826, Republic of Korea 4
Department of Crop Sciences and Safe Global Water Institute, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801, United States
‡
These authors contributed equally to this work.
*Contact Information: email:
[email protected], Phone: 650-725-9298, Fax: 650-723-7058
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Abstract
Following the Food Safety Modernization Act of 2011 in the U.S., guidelines for
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disinfection washes in food packaging facilities are under consideration to control pathogen
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risks. However, disinfectant exposures may need optimization because the high concentrations
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of chlorine disinfectant promote the formation of high levels of disinfection byproducts (DBPs).
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When chlorine doses up through the 200 mg/L as Cl2 range relevant to current practice were
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applied to spinach and lettuce, significant DBP formation was observed, even within 5 min at 7
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°C. Concentrations of volatile chlorinated DBPs in washwater were far higher than typically
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observed in disinfected drinking waters (e.g., 350 µg/L 1,1-dichloropropanone). However, these
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DBPs partitioned to the aqueous phase and so represent a greater concern for disposal or reuse of
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washwater than for consumer exposure via food. The volatile DBPs represent the low-yield,
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final products of chlorination reactions with multiple biomolecular precursors. The initial, high-
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yield transformation products of such reactions may represent a greater concern for consumer
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exposure because they remain bound within the biopolymers in food and would be liberated
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during digestion. Using protein-bound tyrosine as an example precursor, the concentrations of
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the initial 3-chlorotyrosine and 3,5-dichlorotyrosine transformation products from this one
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precursor in the leaf phase were comparable, and in the case of some lettuces exceeded, the
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aggregate aqueous concentration of volatile DBPs formed from multiple precursors.
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Chlorotyrosine formation increased when spinach was shredded due to the greater accessibility
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of chlorine to proteins in the leaf interiors. The cytotoxicity of chlorotyrosines to Chinese
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hamster ovary cells was higher than any of the trihalomethanes regulated in drinking water.
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Introduction
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The application of chemical disinfectants to inactivate pathogens in drinking water was one
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of the most important public health achievements of the past century. As a result, food may now
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surpass drinking water as a pathogen exposure route in the U.S. An estimated 76 million
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illnesses are associated with foodborne pathogens per year in the U.S.,1 compared to a
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conservative estimate of 19.5 million illnesses per year attributable to tap water.2 Leafy
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vegetables have been associated with the majority of multi-state outbreaks.3 Examples include
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199 illnesses across 26 states linked to Escherichia coli O157:H7 on spinach in 2006,4 and 19
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illnesses across 9 states associated with Listeria on lettuce in 2016.5 The resulting interest in food
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safety culminated in the Food Safety Modernization Act of 2011.6 Washing fresh produce with
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disinfected water in packing houses represents a critical control measure. Much like drinking
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water disinfection, guidelines will need to be developed specifying disinfectant exposures, but
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these guidelines may need to be crop-specific. While not yet codified, produce washing facilities
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in the U.S. and several other countries (e.g., Spain) frequently employ chlorine at 50-200 mg/L
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as Cl2 over short timescales (20 mg/L as Cl2 were needed to achieve significant reductions in aerobic plate
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count bacteria in grated carrots.8
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Following the discovery in the 1970s that disinfectant reactions with organic precursors in
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water supplies can produce potentially carcinogenic disinfection byproducts (DBPs),9 drinking
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water facilities have altered disinfectant strategies to balance the acute risk posed by pathogens
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and the chronic risk posed by DBPs.10,11 As guidelines are developed for produce disinfection, it
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will be important to balance these risks. Elevated DBP formation during produce disinfection is
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expected based upon the high chlorine doses and precursor concentrations (e.g., solid lettuce
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leaves) relative to the lower chlorine doses (~5 mg/L as Cl2) and precursor concentrations (~2
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mg/L dissolved organic carbon (DOC)) in drinking water. Indeed, certain northern European
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countries (e.g., Belgium, Germany) have banned chlorinated washwaters for produce
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decontamination due to these concerns.12,13
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Research on DBPs related to food has focused on the same low molecular weight, volatile
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DBPs targeted in drinking water. Shen et al.13 measured up to 858 µg/L chloroform and 1349
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µg/L bromoacetic acid in a washwater simulated by 13 separate injections of lettuce juice and
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periodic additions of chlorine to maintain at least a 2 mg/L as Cl2 residual. In a simulated
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chlorine washwater treatment of cut butterhead lettuce, Van Haute et al.14 measured THMs
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(mostly chloroform) in the washwater, but not on the lettuce. While volatile DBPs are retained in
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pressurized drinking water distribution systems, much of those that form from food disinfection
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may partition to the washwater or disperse via volatilization during transport and storage prior to
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consumer exposure. Thus, volatile DBPs may represent a greater concern for spent washwater
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discharge.
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Moreover, previous research involving chlorination of model biomolecules, the
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predominant precursors in food, has demonstrated that volatile DBPs generally form at 88% relative to spiking into 60 mL of
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buffered deionized water in headspace-free glass tubes without filtration for all of the DBPs
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except chloroform. For chloroform, the recovery was ~70% with the loss mostly attributable to
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the filtration; the chloroform concentrations reported here were not corrected for this recovery.
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Filtration was necessary to adequately separate the aqueous phase from shredded lettuce or
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spinach.
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Analysis of tyrosines: The tyrosine extraction method was adapted from the procedures of
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Bañuelos et al.25 and Montes-Bayon et al.26 Freeze-dried leaf tissues were homogenized with a
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ball mill (Retsch MM 400) using 5 mm diameter stainless steel beads, and shaking at 25 Hz for 2
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min. The homogenized sample was placed in a 11.1-mL glass vial with 6 mL of 4 M
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methanesulfonic acid containing 0.2 wt% tryptamine, and incubated at 110°C for 24 hours in an
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anaerobic glove box to liberate tyrosines from proteins. After neutralizing the acid-digested
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sample with 6 mL of 4 N NaOH, 0.5 mL of a 1 mM solution of L-tyrosine-13C9,15N (500 nmol)
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was spiked into each sample, followed by 17 mL methanol. Each tube was vortexed, allowed to
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stand for 2 hours, vortexed again, centrifuged at 10,000 rpm for 10 min, and filtered through
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filter paper (Whatman Qualitative Filter paper, Grade 1 Circles) to remove solids. Then 8.5 mL
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of chloroform was added and the tubes were capped, shaken vigorously for 2 min, and placed on
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ice overnight. The upper aqueous/methanol phase was transferred to a round bottom flask and
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brought nearly to dryness using a rotary evaporator.
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The sample was reconstituted with 5 mL of 0.1 M pH 5 phosphate buffer. The pH was
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further titrated to reach pH 5 using NaOH. The sample was then passed over Sep-Pak C18 solid
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phase extraction (SPE) cartridges (2 g, 55-105 µm) (Waters Corporation, Milford, MA, USA).
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Each cartridge was pre-treated by flushing with 10 mL of methanol, 10 mL of deionized water
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and 10 mL of 0.1 M phosphate buffer at pH 5. Then the cartridge was loaded with the sample,
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rinsed with 3 mL of 0.1 M phosphate buffer at pH 5, and eluted with 10 mL of 40% methanol.
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For 100% recovery, the stable isotope-labeled tyrosine concentration in this eluent would be 50
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µM.
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A 400 µL aliquot of the eluent was spiked with 16.7 µL of 2.5 mM γ-aminobutyric acid
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(42 nmol) as an internal standard (100 µM final concentration). Then 20 µL of this aliquot was
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mixed with 60 µL of 0.6 M borate buffer solution (pH 8.8) and 20 µL of 10 mM 6-
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aminoquinoline-N-hydroxy-succinimidyl ester (AQC) in acetonitrile solution in a
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microcentrifuge tube, which was then incubated at 55°C for 10 min to derivatize the amino
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acids.27 Derivatized amino acids were quantified via liquid chromatography mass spectrometry
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(LC-MS; Agilent 1260 HPLC system coupled with a 6460 triple quadrupole mass spectrometer)
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using electrospray ionization in the negative mode. Text S1 provides additional details regarding
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the optimization of the SPE protocol and LC-MS parameters. Titrating the pH to 5 prior to SPE
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extraction was critical for maximizing recovery.
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To evaluate matrix effects on both derivatization efficiency and LC-MS analysis, a
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matrix was constituted by processing 1 g of shredded spinach (without exposure to chlorine)
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according to the protocol described above from freeze-drying of the leaves through the elution
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from the SPE cartridges. Comparison of signal intensities of analytes (normalized by those of γ-
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aminobutyric acid as an internal standard) in the matrix to those in deionized water indicated that
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the matrix suppressed signals by 33% for 3-chlorotyrosine, by 46% for 3,5-dichlorotyrosine and
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by 53% for mass-labeled tyrosine; mass-labeled tyrosine was used to evaluate matrix effects for
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tyrosine due to the substantial (~500 µM) concentrations of tyrosine already present in the
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matrix.
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To evaluate method detection limits (MDLs) for chlorotyrosines within the post-SPE
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elution spinach matrix described above, seven different matrix aliquots were spiked with 0.2 µM
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of 3-chlorotyrosine and 3,5-dichlorotyrosine and analyzed as described above. Based upon the
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standard deviation of these 7 spiked samples, the MDLs were 0.072 µM for 3-chlorotyrosine and
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0.085 µM for 3,5-dichlorotyrosine.28 For the 1 g (wet weight) spinach or lettuce samples
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typically used in our experiments, these concentrations correspond to 0.72 nmol/g for 3-
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chlorotyrosine and 0.85 nmol/g spinach for 3,5-dichlorotyrosine. The MDL was not determined
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for tyrosine, because tyrosine was always present in substantial concentrations.
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Method recoveries were evaluated by spiking 20 nmol of 3-chlorotyrosine and 3,5dichlorotyrosine, and 42 nmol of mass-labeled tyrosine into spinach samples directly after acid
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digestion and neutralization. Using standards constituted within the post-SPE elution spinach
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matrix for comparison, recoveries were 56% (±4%; n = 4) for mass-labeled tyrosine, 48% (±4%;
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n = 4) for 3-chlorotyrosine and 80% (±4%; n = 4) for 3,5-dichlorotyrosine. Because of the
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substantial tyrosine concentrations present in the sample matrix, tyrosine was quantified using a
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standard curve constituted in deionized water using mass-labeled tyrosine for isotope dilution
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analysis, which accounts for extraction and derivatization efficiencies, and matrix suppression.
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Chlorotyrosines were quantified using standards constituted in a spinach sample matrix (post-
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SPE elution) using γ-aminobutyric acid as an internal standard, which accounts for derivatization
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efficiency and matrix suppression effects on the LC-MS analysis, but not extraction efficiency.
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These concentrations were then corrected for the recoveries measured above.
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Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) Cell Chronic Cytotoxicity Analyses: For in vitro, chronic
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quantitative analysis for cytotoxicity, CHO K1 cell line AS52, clone 11-4-8 was used.29 The
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CHO cells were maintained in Ham’s F12 medium with 5% fetal bovine serum (FBS), 1% L-
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glutamine, and 1% antibiotics (0.25 µg/mL amphotericin B, 100 µg/mL streptomycin sulfate, and
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100 units/mL sodium penicillin G in 0.85% saline) at 37°C in a mammalian cell incubator with a
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humidified atmosphere of 5% CO2. Details of the CHO cell cytotoxicity assay were
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published.30,31 Each halotyrosine was diluted with F12 plus FBS cell culture medium, and in
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general, 10 concentrations (with independent replicates) were analyzed within a 96-well
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microplate. After 72 h, the cell density was measured spectroscopically and expressed as the
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percentage of the concurrent negative control. These data were used to generate individual
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cytotoxicity concentration-response curves for 3-chlorotyrosine and 3,5-dichlorotyrosine.
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Regression analyses of the concentration-response curves were used to generate a LC50 value for
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each compound. The LC50 value was the concentration of the sample that induced a cell density
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of 50% as compared to the concurrent negative controls. For each halotyrosine, a one-way
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analysis of variance (ANOVA) statistical test was conducted to determine the lowest molar
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concentration that induced a statistically significant level of cytotoxicity as compared to their
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concurrent negative control.32 The power of the test was maintained at >0.8 at α = 0.05.
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Results and Discussion
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Whole spinach leaf chlorination: Initial experiments involved treatment of whole spinach
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leaves (~1 g; Sigona’s Market bunch #1) at pH 7 with 0 or 100 mg/L as Cl2 chlorine for 15 min
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at 21°C. Prior to chlorination, tyrosine was measured at 6.7 µmol/g spinach (Figure S3), along
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with low levels of 3-chlorotyrosine (2.5 nmol/g spinach) and 3,5-dichlorotyrosine (1.5 nmol/g
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spinach) (Figure 1). The 3-chlorotyrosine and 3,5-dichlorotyrosine concentrations increased to
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5.9 nmol/g spinach and 5.5 nmol/g spinach, respectively, after application of 100 mg/L as Cl2
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free chlorine. While the yields of chlorotyrosines remained low (0.17%) relative to the 6.7
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µmol/g spinach tyrosine initially measured, all of the chlorotyrosines were retrieved from the
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spinach rather than the aqueous phase, suggesting their relevance to human exposure.
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Only the aqueous phase was assayed for volatile DBPs. For a control experiment in
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which deionized water buffered at pH 7 was spiked with a 10 µg/L mixture of these volatile
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DBPs and shaken for 15 min in the absence or presence of whole leaf spinach (~1 g), there was
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no significant difference in the final aqueous volatile DBP concentrations. Concurring with
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previous results with THMs14, these results demonstrate that the volatile DBPs remain mostly in
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the aqueous phase, and so are predominantly a concern for washwater disposal. Total volatile
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DBP concentrations measured in the aqueous phase increased from non-detectable in the absence
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of free chlorine to 37.5 nmol/g spinach after treatment with 100 mg/L as Cl2 chlorine; although
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measured in the aqueous phase, volatile DBP concentrations are reported as yields relative to
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spinach wet weight to facilitate comparison of the production of chlorotyrosines and volatile
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DBPs. The total volatile DBP concentration was 3.3-fold higher than the total chlorotyrosines.
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While THMs typically predominate among the volatile DBPs in chlorinated drinking waters,33,34
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1,1-dichloropropanone, was the dominant volatile DBP formed from the chlorinated spinach,
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followed by dichloroacetonitrile, chloroform and trichloroacetaldehyde (Figure S3).
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Effect of shredding or puréeing spinach: Shredded spinach leaves (from Safeway®) were
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treated at pH 7 and 21°C for 15 min with 0-200 mg/L as Cl2 chlorine. The tyrosine retrieved
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from the spinach remained at ~6.6-8.6 µmol/g spinach regardless of free chlorine dose (Figure
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S4); this tyrosine concentration was similar to the whole leaf experiments (Figure S3), even
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though the spinach was from a different bunch. Total chlorotyrosine yields retrieved from the
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leaves increased with chlorine dose from 3.5 nmol/g spinach with no chlorine treatment to 76
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nmol/g spinach for treatment with 200 mg/L as Cl2 (Figure 2). The 53 nmol/g spinach total
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chlorotyrosine yield measured for the 100 mg/L as Cl2 chlorine dose represents a 0.79% yield
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relative to tyrosine, 4.6-fold higher than the 0.17% yield measured for whole spinach leaves. In
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both cases, the lack of significant transformation of tyrosine upon chlorination (Figures S3 and
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S4) suggests that the low yields resulted from the inaccessibility of protein-bound tyrosine within
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leave interiors to chlorine reactions rather than the formation of alternative chlorination products.
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Among chlorotyrosines, 3-chlorotyrosine dominated at a 20 mg/L as Cl2 chlorine dose, but the
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concentrations of 3-chlorotyrosine and 3,5-dichlorotyrosine became comparable at the highest
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chlorine doses.
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Total volatile DBP yields increased with chlorine dose, from non-detectable for no
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chlorine exposure to 243 nmol/g spinach for 200 mg/L as Cl2 (Figure S4). The concentration of
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total chlorotyrosines ranged from 21-56% of the total volatile DBP concentration. The 131
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nmol/g spinach total volatile DBPs measured for the 100 mg/L as Cl2 chlorine dose was
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significantly higher than the 37.5 nmol/g spinach measured with whole spinach leaves. For
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chlorine doses above 50 mg/L as Cl2, 1,1-dichloropropanone was the most abundant volatile
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DBP, followed by dichloroacetonitrile, chloroform, and dichloroacetamide. The aqueous
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concentrations of some of these DBPs were far higher than typically observed in chlorinated
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drinking waters33,34; for example, the aqueous concentrations of 1,1-dichloropropanone and
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dichloroacetonitrile reached 350 µg/L and 190 µg/L, respectively, for 200 mg/L as Cl2 chlorine.
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The significantly higher chlorotyrosine yields for the shredded relative to whole leaf
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spinach suggested that shredding the spinach facilitated access of the chlorine to proteins within
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the interior of the spinach leaves. In whole leaf spinach, proteins within the interior of a leaf
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may be protected from reactions with chlorine by the waxy cuticles coating the leaf exterior. To
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test this hypothesis, 200 mg/L as Cl2 chlorine was applied to 20 mg-C/L of puréed and filtered
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spinach (Safeway®) at pH 7 for 15 min (Figure S5); this DOC level approximates the DOC
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measured in the shredded spinach or lettuce experiments. The aqueous phase protein remaining
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after puréeing and filtering was considered to be fully accessible to chlorine reactions. Tyrosines
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were measured in the aqueous phase after liberation by acid digestion. The 95 µmol/L tyrosine
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measured in the absence of chlorine was reduced to 8.6 µmol/L by chlorination, yielding 18.4
338
µmol/L 3-chlorotyrosine and 44.6 µmol/L 3,5-dichlorotyrosine, indicating a 67% chlorotyrosine
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yield. Total volatile DBPs increased from non-detectable to 0.5 µmol/L, far lower than the
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chlorotyrosines. Chloroform was the dominant volatile DBP, followed by dichloroacetonitrile
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and trichloroacetaldehyde (Figure S5).
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Effect of temperature and contact time: The preceding experiments involved chlorination for
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15 min at 21 °C. Chlorination at washing facilities may involve shorter chlorine contact times
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and low temperatures to minimize browning and other aesthetic defects. To characterize the
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importance of these conditions, DBP formation was measured after treatment of 1 g shredded
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spinach (Sigona’s Market bunch #2) with 100 mg/L as Cl2 free chlorine for 5 or 15 min at either
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7 °C or 21°C. The 5.5 µmol/g spinach tyrosine measured after chlorination for 15 min at 21°C in
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this batch of shredded spinach (Figure S6) was comparable to that measured in shredded leaves
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from a different batch of spinach after a similar treatment (Figure S4). Total DBP formation
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increased with both chlorine contact time and temperature (Figure 3), as expected. However,
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total DBP formation for chlorination for 5 min at 7 °C was still ~50% of that measured after
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chlorination for 15 min at 21 °C. With respect to the chlorination of shredded spinach for 15 min
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at 21 °C, the 94 nmol/g spinach yield of total chlorotyrosines (1.7% molar yield relative to
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tyrosine) was somewhat higher than the 53 nmol/g spinach yield observed with a different batch
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of spinach for the same treatment conditions (Figure 2). The contributions from 3-chlorotyrosine
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and 3,5-dichlorotyrosine were approximately equal, and chlorotyrosine formation was more
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dependent on contact time than temperature. However, the 252 nmol/g spinach yield of total
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volatile DBPs for chlorination for 15 min at 21 °C (Figure S6) was higher than that observed
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from a different batch of shredded spinach (Figure S4), and also higher than the total
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chlorotyrosines. While dichloroacetamide, trichloroacetaldehyde, dichloroacetonitrile and
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chloroform were the predominant volatile DBPs formed during chlorination of this spinach
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bunch, 1,1-dichloropropanone and dichloroacetonitrile were the predominant volatile DBPs
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formed with a different shredded spinach bunch (Figure S4); this variability is further evaluated
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below.
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Shredded lettuce chlorination: Lettuce is more likely to be washed in a shredded state (e.g., for
368
use in restaurants) than spinach. For an initial comparison between spinach and lettuce, 1 g
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shredded butterhead lettuce was treated at pH 7 and 21 ºC for 15 min with 0-200 mg/L as Cl2
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chlorine. Approximately 3 µmol/g lettuce of tyrosine was detected in the shredded lettuce before
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chlorination (Figure S7), two-fold lower than in spinach. Chlorotyrosine formation increased
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with chlorine dose (Figure 4), reaching 212 nmol/g lettuce after treatment with 200 mg/L as Cl2.
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The importance of 3,5-dichlorotyrosine increased with chlorine dose, equaling the 3-
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chlorotyrosine concentration at the highest doses. While the total chlorotyrosine yields per wet
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weight from lettuce (Figure 4) were two-fold higher than from shredded spinach (Figure 2), the
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yields for treatment with 200 mg/L as Cl2 chlorine were even higher (6.7% for lettuce vs. 1.2%
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for spinach) due to the lower tyrosine content in lettuce. The greater molar conversion of
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tyrosine to chlorotyrosines in lettuce may reflect the higher chlorine-to-tyrosine molar ratio or
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may suggest greater accessibility of free chlorine to protein in the interiors of shredded lettuce
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leaves. Alternatively, the high antioxidant content of spinach (carotenes, ascorbic acid, and
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flavonoids35) could help protect the tyrosines in spinach from reactions with chlorine. However,
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while raw spinach has roughly twice the total phenolic content (205 mg gallic acid equivalents
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(GAE)/100 g) compared to butterhead lettuce (100 mg GAE/100 g), their Oxygen Radical
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Absorbance Capacities are similar (~1500 µmol Trolox equivalents/100 g).36
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Unlike shredded spinach (Figure 2), the yields of volatile DBPs extracted from the
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aqueous phase from chlorinated shredded lettuce were lower than the yields of chlorinated
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tyrosines extracted from the shredded lettuce solids (Figure 4). Dichloroacetamide was the most
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abundant volatile DBP (Figure S7).
389 390
Variability across batches: DBP formation from treatment of shredded leaves from two
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additional spinach bunches and four additional lettuce varieties (iceberg, romaine, green leaf and
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red leaf) with 20 mg/L as Cl2 chlorine for 15 min at pH 7 and room temperature was compared to
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DBP formation measured previously from treatment of shredded spinach (Figures 2 and S4) and
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butterhead lettuce (Figures 4 and S7) under comparable conditions to characterize variability
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between batches (Figure 5). The tyrosine content was fairly similar across the three spinach
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bunches at ~7-9 µmol/g spinach Tyrosine content was lower in the lettuce varieties, ranging from
397
0.7 µmol/g in the green leaf sample to 3 µmol/g in the butterhead lettuce. The total
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chlorotyrosine content in the shredded spinach samples ranged from 12-18 nmol/g, lower than
399
the 21-56 nmol/g range observed in the shredded lettuce samples. 3,5-Dichlorotyrosine was more
400
significant in lettuce. In addition to higher absolute chlorotyrosine concentrations, shredded
401
lettuce also featured higher chlorotyrosine yields (0.9-5.7%) than shredded spinach (0.14-0.21%)
402
due to the lower tyrosine content in lettuce. Total volatile DBPs ranged from 22-44 nmol/g in
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shredded spinach samples and 28-81 nmol/g in shredded lettuce samples. The ratio of
404
chlorotyrosines to total volatile DBPs was generally higher in shredded lettuce than shredded
405
spinach, except for red leaf lettuce. The predominant volatile DBP classes also varied widely.
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Dichloroacetamide and 1,1-dichloropropanone were typically the predominant species, although
407
chloroform was significant for the red leaf, romaine and butterhead lettuces (Figure 5).
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Cytotoxicity: The concentration-response curves illustrating CHO cell chronic cytotoxicity for
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3-chlorotyrosine and 3,5-dichlorotyrosine are presented in Figure S8. Each halotyrosine induced
411
a statistical increase in cytotoxicity as compared to their negative controls (Table S2). Based on
412
the lowest significant cytotoxic concentration, 3,5-dichlorotyrosine was approximately 20× more
413
toxic than 3-chlorotyrosine. Based on the LC50 values, 3-chlorotyrosine (3.17 mM) and 3,5-
414
dichlorotyrosine (0.71 mM) are more cytotoxic (i.e., lower LC50 values) than the four regulated
415
THMs (3.96-11.5 mM).30 These halotyrosines are also comparable in cytotoxicity to chloroacetic
416
acid (0.81 mM), dichloroacetic acid (7.3 mM), trichloroacetic acid (2.4 mM), and dibromoacetic
417
acid (0.59 mM).30,37 Haloaromatic compounds typically are more toxic than haloaliphatic
418
compounds, but toxicity tends to increase with hydrophobicity.38 The comparable toxicity of
419
halotyrosines to haloacetic acids may result from the hydrophilicity of halotyrosines resulting
420
from their charged functional groups.
421 422
Implications: High levels of DBPs can form during food disinfection due to the high chlorine
423
disinfectant doses applied and organic precursor concentrations (e.g., solid leaves). High
424
chlorine doses may be applied (up to 200 mg/L as Cl28,12,13,22,23) even when low chlorine
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residuals are targeted (~2 mg/L as Cl2) because of the high chlorine demand in these waters, with
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significant chlorine consumption occurring in