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Article 15
Interactions of N-sulfadiazine and soil components as evidenced by N-CPMAS NMR 15
Anne Elisabeth E. Berns, Herbert Philipp, Hans Lewandowski, Jeong-Heui Choi, Marc Lamshöft, and Hans-Dieter Narres Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b06164 • Publication Date (Web): 21 Feb 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 22, 2018
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Environmental Science & Technology
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Interactions of 15N-sulfadiazine and soil components as
2
evidenced by 15N-CPMAS NMR
3
Anne E. Berns,*,† Herbert Philipp,† Hans Lewandowski,† Jeong-Heui Choi,‡,§
4
Marc Lamshöft‡,|| and Hans-Dieter Narres†,⊥
5
†
6
52425 Jülich, Germany.
7
‡
8
Strasse 6, 44227 Dortmund, Germany.
9
* Corresponding author (
[email protected])
Institute of Bio- and Geosciences (IBG-3) - Agrosphere, Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH,
Institute of Environmental Research (INFU), Dortmund University of Technology, Otto-Hahn-
10
§
National Institute of Environmental Research, Hwangyeong-ro 42, Seo-gu, 22689 Incheon,
Republic of Korea. ||
Bayer CropScience, Alfred-Nobel-Str. 50, 40789 Monheim am Rhein, Germany.
⊥
Venloerstr. 738, 50827 Köln, Germany.
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Abstract
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The extensive use of sulfonamides (SNs) in animal husbandry has led to an
13
unintentional widespread occurrence in several environmental compartments. The
14
implementation of regulations and management recommendations to reduce the
15
potential risk of development of antibiotic resistances necessitates detailed knowledge
16
on their fate in soil. We present results from two independent incubation studies of 15N-
17
labeled sulfadiazines (SDZ) which focused on identifying binding types in bound
18
residues. In the first study
19
isolated humic acids in the presence and absence of Trametes versicolor laccase, while
20
in the second study
21
Luvisol and isolated the humic acid fraction after sequential extraction of the soil. The
22
freeze-dried humic acid fractions of both studies were then analyzed by
23
NMR and compared with the
24
studies amide bonds and Michael adducts were identified, while formation of imine
25
bonds could be excluded. In the humic acid study, where less harsh extraction methods
26
were applied, possible formation of H-bridging and sequestration were detected
27
additionally.
15
15
N-amino labeled SDZ was incubated with two previously
N-double-labeled SDZ was incubated with a typical agricultural
15
N-CPMAS
15
N-spectra of synthesized model compounds. In both
28
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Introduction
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Sulfonamides (SNs) are the oldest class of synthetic antibiotics in use and act as
31
competitive inhibitors of p-aminobenzoic acid in the folate synthesis in bacteria.1 Their
32
extensive use in animal husbandry has led to an unintentional widespread occurrence in
33
several environmental compartments like surface waters, ground waters and soils.2-4
34
Baran et al.2 estimated that worldwide over 20,000 Mg of SNs are introduced into the
35
biosphere every year. The potential risk of development of antibiotic resistances in soil
36
microorganisms through this permanent exposure to low levels of antibiotics, including
37
a possible subsequent transfer of the resistance genes to pathogens,5-8 and induced
38
alterations in soil microbial community structures9-14 are main environmental concerns.
39
Furthermore, several studies demonstrated that SNs were able to leach into deeper soil
40
layers and could hence potentially reach the groundwater table.15-18
41
Possible routes of attenuation in soil are biodegradation,19-21 photodegradation22,
23
42
and sorption to the soil matrix24-28 with subsequent formation of bound residues.29,
30
43
Due to their amphoteric character, the sorption affinity of SNs to different mineral or
44
organic soil constituents is higher at pH values below pKa2 and sorption decreases at
45
elevated pH values.31 In general sorption was found to be higher for organic sorbents
46
than for inorganic soil components25,
47
desorption.31,
48
transport experiments in soil columns17,
49
sorption site. Several studies, investigating the fate of SNs in soil, identified a number
50
of metabolites37-39 and more or less large amounts of what is often termed non-
51
extractable or bound residues.40,
52
(SDZ) occuring in soil were hydroxylation of the pyrimidyl moiety, acetylation of the
53
aniline moiety and cleavage of the molecule at the sulfonamid bond23 (also see Figure
34
32, 33
and often hysteresis was observed during
Modeling of long-term sorption/desorption experiments31 and of SN
41
35, 36
required the inclusion of an irreversible
The main reported transformations of sulfadiazine
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S1 in SI section). Specific identification of the structure of the unknown residues is
55
usually deemed necessary for problematic xenobiotics as a true incorporation into the
56
soil organic matter, through chemical reaction of reactive groups of the parent with
57
functional groups from the soil matrix, constitutes a definite removal of the parent and
58
hence reduces its potential environmental risk.
59
Several excellent studies on the possible chemical interactions of SNs with soil
60
organic matter have been published. Bialk et al.42 incubated different SNs with model
61
humic constituents in the presence of different enzymes or manganese oxide in aqueous
62
solutions and recorded the decline in SN concentration. With solution-state NMR
63
spectroscopy, they were able to demonstrate the formation of covalent imine bonds
64
(Schiff bases) between
65
acid in the presence of the peroxidase Arthromyces ramosus (ARP) and
66
hydrogenperoxide. Bialk et al.43 could additionally identify a Michael adduct between
67
15
68
Trametes versicolor laccase in the presence of oxygen, which oxidized the
69
protocatechuic acid in a first step to an ortho-quinone. The authors hypothesized that
70
Michael adducts were more likely to persist in soils as Schiff bases can be hydrolyzed in
71
aqueous environments. Bialk and Pedersen44 presented the reaction of
72
sulfamethazine and 15N-labeled sulfapyridine with Elliot soil humic acid in the presence
73
of A. ramosus peroxidase. The reaction products were analyzed with solution-state 13C-
74
and
75
coupling products of 13C-sulfamethazine indicated a covalent linkage through the anilic
76
nitrogen. 1H-15N heteronuclear multiple-bond correlation (HMBC) experiments on the
77
products of 15N-sulfapyridine were consistent with Michael adduct formation. Enamine
78
and imine structures were not detected.
13
C-labeled sulfamethazine and the substituted phenol syringic
N-amino labeled sulfapyridine and protocatechuic acid. The reaction was catalyzed by
15
13
C-labeled
N-NMR. 1H-13C heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) spectra of the
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Schwarz et al.45 performed a series of reaction experiments with three differently
80
substituted SNs (sulfanilamide, sulfapyridine and sulfadimethoxine) and three
81
substituted phenols (catechol, guaiacol and vanillin) as typical model fragments of soil
82
humic substances. The authors found that depending on the substituted phenol and SN
83
used nonenzymatic reaction could lead to a decrease of free SN in solution. When the
84
different SN and phenol mixtures were incubated with laccase the decrease was
85
significantly stronger and faster. The coupling product of vanillin and sulfapyridine
86
formed in the presence of laccase was analyzed by 15N-CPMAS NMR and the authors
87
recorded a signal at -260 ppm, which they assigned to amide-N. The lack of a 15N-label
88
prevented further signal resolution.
89
Gulkowska et al.46-48 studied the reaction of SNs with model humic constituents and
90
synthetic and natural humic acids. Reaction with model humic constituents revealed
91
that, although aromatic amines bind to quinones through 1,2- and 1,4-additions (to form
92
imines and anilinoquinones, respectively), SNs are relatively weak nucleophiles, which
93
need reactive quinones for addition.46 A second study evidenced that the reactivity
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toward nucleophilic attacks was mainly depending on the redox state of the organic
95
matter. However, experiments with natural humic acid indicated that the pool of
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reactive quinones is much smaller than the total number of quinones in SOM and that
97
most quinones in soil have a low electrophilicity. The authors demonstrated that laccase
98
converts unreactive hydroquinones to reactive quinones and that subsequently the
99
formed quinones can form covalent bonds with SNs.47 In a third study they concluded
100
that the number of reactive quinones was the limiting factor for the formation of non-
101
extractable SN residues in soils.48
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As soil incubation studies often lead to samples with very low signal-to-noise ratios
103
or no recordable signal in solid-state NMR, most bound residue studies involving NMR
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are done on soil fractions like humic acids. This approach, however, bears the risk of
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generating reaction products which are not necessarily formed in soil. We aimed at
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identifying binding types of SDZ with different humic acids and estimating whether
107
results from such humic acid studies are also found in soil incubation studies. The
108
present paper combines two independently conducted incubation studies with
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labeled SDZ and links the results of a relatively artificial humic acid approach to those
110
of a more realistic incubation with natural soil. Hence in one study, 15N-amino labeled
111
SDZ was reacted with two previously isolated humic acids in the presence and absence
112
of Trametes versicolor laccase and changes in the chemical environment of the labeled
113
amino group were identified through 15N-CPMAS NMR. In a second study, 15N-double-
114
labeled SDZ was incubated with a typical agricultural Luvisol. After incubation and
115
extraction of the still extractable antibiotic fraction the humic acid fraction was isolated
116
and analyzed by 15N-CPMAS NMR.
117
Materials and Methods
118
Chemicals for the humic acid study 15
119
15
N-
N-amino labeled sulfadiazine (15N-SDZ) was synthesized starting from 15N-labeled 15
120
aniline (synthesis is described in the Supporting Information (SI) section).
121
aniline (99 %
122
was checked with HPLC and the structure with liquid state 1H and
123
spectroscopy. All other chemicals were purchased in synthetic grade (p.a.) and used as
124
is.
15
N-labeled
N) was purchased from Isotec (Miamisburg, Ohio, USA). The purity 13
C NMR
125
The syntheses of the 15N-labeled model compounds are described in the SI.
126
Laccase C (EC 1.10.3.2) from the white-rot fungus Trametes versicolor was
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purchased from ASA Spezialenzyme GmbH (Braunschweig, Germany) and had a
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laccase activity of 615.3 U g-1.49 Heat-inactivated laccase was used as a control. For
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application a suspension containing 20.5 U ml-1 (33.3 mg mL-1) was prepared.
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Two humic acids (HAs) were used in the present study. The first HA originated from
131
the Ap horizon (0–30 cm) of a field site at Krauthausen near Jülich, Germany,50
132
(formerly classified as gleyic Planosol,51 now considered a gleyic Stagnosol52). The
133
extraction and clean-up procedures are described in Witte et al.53 and Berns et al.49 The
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second HA was the standard IHSS Elliot soil HA (1S102H), which was purchased from
135
IHSS and used as is. The elemental compositions of the HAs are summarized in Table
136
S1. Reaction between humic acid and 15N-SDZ
137 138
The reaction of
15
N-SDZ with HA was carried out as described in Berns et al.49
139
Briefly, we added 300 mg HA, 15 mg SDZ (i.e. 50 µg SDZ/mg HA) and 20.5 U of
140
active laccase from T. versicolor per preparation. The pH value of the
141
suspension was 6.0 to avoid precipitation of the HAs and remained at this pH during the
142
experiment. The suspension was stirred in a temperature-controlled glass vessel at 25°C
143
in the dark and the decrease of free SDZ in solution was monitored via HPLC (see SI)
144
until a constant value was reached (approx. 30 days). Free, non-reacted or loosely
145
sorbed SDZ was removed through repetitive dialysis against deionized water until the
146
concentration of SDZ in the dialysis water, determined by HPLC, dropped below the
147
detection limit. The 15N-SDZ-HA adducts, remaining in the dialysis bags, were freeze-
148
dried. Preparations without SDZ (i.e., only HA and laccase), without humic acid (i.e.,
149
only SDZ and laccase) and with heat deactivated laccase (i.e., HA, SDZ and heat
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deactivated laccase) were run as control experiments.
151
Chemicals for the soil study
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N-SDZ/HA-
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15
N-double-labeled sulfadiazine (15N(dl)-SDZ), labeled at the amino and sulfonamido
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positions, was purchased from Quotient Bioresearch Ltd. (Cardiff, UK) (chemical purity
154
≥ 98%, isotopic abundance > 98%). All other chemicals were purchased in synthetic
155
grade (p.a.) and used as is.
156
The soil used for the incubation was a Luvisol derived from loess and originated
157
from the plough layer of a field site at Merzenhausen, Germany.54 The collected soil
158
was air-dried, homogenized, sieved to 2 mm, and stored at ambient temperature prior to
159
incubation. The textural class was silt loam with 6 % sand, 78 % silt and 16 % clay.
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Organic carbon content, effective cation exchange capacity and pH were 1.22 %, 11.4
161
cmolc kg-1 dry weight and 6.3, respectively.
162
The manure used was supplied from the former study40 as a blank manure, and
163
kept at –70°C until the present incubation experiment without drying. Incubation of soil with 15N(dl)-SDZ
164 165
15
N(dl)-SDZ was mixed with manure at a concentration of 2.5 mg SDZ g-1 manure.
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The contaminated manure was mixed with 150 g dry soil at a concentration of 4 g
167
manure per 100 g dry soil resulting in a SDZ-concentration of 100 mg SDZ kg-1 soil.
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The mixture was homogenized for 2 h in a tumbling mixer and subsequently
169
moisturized to 40% of maximum WHC. Soil incubation was set up in duplicate and
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incubated with aeration at 24°C in the dark for 180 days. Water content was regularly
171
checked by weighing and replacing evaporated water. After 28 days a 5 g aliquot was
172
taken and extracted twice with 0.01 M CaCl2 solution at a 1:2.5 soil/solution ratio and
173
passed through ASE extraction applying the optimal ASE conditions determined by
174
Stoob et al.55 The ASE-extracted soil residue was then air-dried, sieved (< 0.063 mm)
175
and washed with 0.1 M HCl by shaking for 1 h to remove fulvic acid. The soil pellet
176
derived by centrifugation (5000×g, 5 min) was extracted according to Dec et al.56 with
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minor modifications. Briefly, the washed soil pellet was suspended in 1 mL of 2M
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NaOH and 20 mL of 0.1 M NaOH, and shaken for 12 h under nitrogen. The NaOH
179
extract (supernatant) was separated by centrifugation (9000×g, 10 min), and these steps
180
were replicated twice. The combined NaOH extract was acidified with 2 mL of 5M HCl
181
to pH < 1 and kept at 4°C overnight, and lastly centrifuged. The precipitated humic acid
182
fraction was refined by dissolution with 0.1 mL of 2 M NaOH and 3 mL of 0.1 M
183
NaOH, followed by centrifugation. The supernatant was acidified, stored and
184
centrifuged as mentioned before. The pellet (humic acid fraction) was finally washed
185
with distilled water twice and lyophilized. The lyophilized HA sample was then
186
analyzed by 15N-CPMAS NMR. CPMAS 15N-NMR Spectroscopy
187 188
A Varian INOVA™ unity NMR spectrometer operating at 60.815 MHz for 15N was
189
used to acquire all spectra. The spectrometer was equipped with a MAS narrow bore
190
probe with a 6 mm stator.
191
referencing and chemical shift values are given in parts per million relative to CH3NO2
192
(= 0 ppm). Chemical shift values referenced to NH4+ (= 0 ppm) are given in the SI
193
section.
15
NH415NO3 and
15
N-labeled glycine were used for
194
For each humic acid adduct and its corresponding background experiment 256 k free
195
induction decays (FID) were accumulated with a repetition time of 2 s with VNMRJ
196
software (Version 1.1 RevisionD, Varian Inc., Palo Alto, CA, USA). A non-ramped
197
cross-polarization sequence with a contact time of 2 ms was applied. Humic acid
198
adducts and their respective blanks were spun at 6 kHz and measured using the same
199
amount of material to be able to subtract the background spectra from the HA adduct
200
spectra. For each model compound and labeled reactant the appropriate delay time to
201
avoid signal saturation was determined and the scan number adjusted for good signal-
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to-noise ratio. The soil HA samples were spun at 8 kHz and recorded with a ramped CP
203
sequence and a contact time of 1 ms. About 160000 FIDs were recorded with a recycle
204
delay of 0.5 s.
205
Fourier transforms of the FIDs were carried out using MestReC (Version 4.9.9.9,
206
Mestrelab Research, Santiago de Compostela, Spain). All FIDs were transformed by
207
first applying a zero filling and then an exponential filter function with a line
208
broadening (LB) of 10-20 Hz for the model compounds and 50-100 Hz for the humic
209
acid adducts and soil humic acids.
210
DFT calculations
211
Density functional theory (DFT) calculations were performed using Gaussian 03.57
212
The geometries were fully optimized using the B3-LYP methods in Gaussian 03 with
213
‘tight’ convergence criteria until the root-mean-square forces were smaller than 1×10−5
214
hartree bohr−1. The basis set for the geometry optimization was 6-311+G(d,p) and 6-
215
31G(d,p) for the more complex benzoquinone structure. The
216
shielding tensors were calculated using the GIAO method and the B3LYP functional in
217
conjunction with the 6-311+G(d,p) basis set. As a reference for the 15N chemical shifts
218
as calculated we employed nitromethane. For the geometry optimization and shielding
219
tensor calculation of nitromethane the same method and basis set were used. The
220
reference value was -158 ppm calculated with the 6-311+G(d,p) basis set and -159 ppm
221
with the 6-31G(d,p) basis set. The calculation of the chemical shift of the hydrogen
222
bonds between SDZ and p-benzochinone were done with the program Turbomol and the
223
B3-LYP method and the TZVP basis set.
224
Results and Discussion
225
Uptake of 15N-labeled SDZ
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N NMR magnetic
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The initial reaction between HAs and SDZ was monitored by recording the decrease
227
of free SDZ in solution and considering the difference to the original concentration as
228
being taken up by the HAs not differentiating between underlying processes. The initial
229
uptake of 15N-labeled SDZ on both humic acids in the presence and absence of laccase
230
is shown in Figure 1. The molar uptake was similar on both humic acids and in a similar
231
order of magnitude as the amounts observed in a previously conducted
232
aminobenzothiazole study49. The presence of laccase caused an increased uptake of
233
about 3-4 times compared to the respective experiments without laccase. This is in line
234
with Gulkowska et al.48 and can be explained by the increased amounts of reactive
235
quinones generated by the action of the laccase. Blank experiments without humic acids
236
and without laccase (Figure S7 in SI) showed that the reaction vessel itself adsorbed
237
only minor amounts of SDZ. Control experiments without humic acids, but with laccase
238
(Figure S7 in SI), showed a loss of SDZ in solution, which represented roughly a fourth
239
of the amounts sorbed to HAs. In order to determine whether the carrier material of the
240
enzyme was responsible for substantial sorption, control experiments with heat-
241
deactivated enzyme were done (Figure 1 and S7 in SI). No significant uptake was
242
recorded in these experiments. Hence, the decline in free SDZ recorded in the control
243
experiments with SDZ and enzyme was due to enzymatic transformation of SDZ as
244
already reported by Schwarz et al.,19,
245
during interpretation of the 15N-spectra.
246 247 248
45
15
N-
a fact which needs to be taken into account
The uptake curves recorded in the presence of laccase and oxygene were best fitted by assuming two overlapping processes (eq 1) 49, 58: y(t) = a1 [1-exp(-k1t)]+ a2 [1-exp(-k2t)]0.5
(1)
249
The first term mirrors a fast (sorption or reaction) process, which dominates at the
250
beginning of the experiment, while the second term accounts for a slow diffusion-
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251
controlled process. Both uptake curves recorded without laccase could be fitted solely
252
with the second term. Plotting the uptake curves as a function of the square root of time
253
(see insert in Figure 1) shows that the uptake without laccase is a purely diffusion-
254
controlled process while in the presence of laccase diffusion becomes only dominant for
255
reaction times greater than 2 days. Interaction of 15N-SDZ with humic acid
256 257
It was already evidenced from literature that the amino group was the main reaction
258
site of SNs, the same site through which SNs bind to intracellular dihydropteroate
259
synthase and exert their bacteriostatic effect.1, 2, 42, 59 Hence, we used 15N-amino labeled
260
SDZ to be able to follow changes in the chemical environment of this group through
261
solid-state NMR. Figure 2 shows the background corrected 15N-CPMAS spectra of the
262
reaction products of
263
absence of laccase. The spectra were recorded after dialysis of the humic acid reaction
264
mixtures, which removed non-reacted excess
265
from the mixtures, which were subsequently freeze-dried. The isolated
266
adducts contained 36 to 37 weight-% of
267
prepared without laccase contained only 10 to 11 weight-% of
268
non-corrected spectra and their corresponding background spectra can be found in the
269
SI (Figure S8). To allow a rough comparison between signal intensities the spectra were
270
recorded on similar amounts of humic acids with identical scan numbers. Both
271
experiments conducted in the presence of laccase (Figure 2a) resulted in significantly
272
higher amounts of
273
laccase (Figure 2b). Both spectra (Figure 2a) contained two major signals centered
274
around -245 and -300 ppm. However, the ratios of these two signals differed. In
275
between these two main signals a large shoulder was present most likely generated by a
15
15
N-SDZ with two different humic acids in the presence and
15
15
N-SDZ and soluble reaction products
N-labeled SDZ. The
15
15
15
N-SDZ-HA
N-SDZ-HA adducts
N-labeled SDZ. The
N-SDZ-HA adducts than the corresponding experiments without
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third signal centered at around -265 ppm. According to Knicker and Lüdemann60 the
277
signals at -245 and -265 ppm can be assigned to amide bonds. The signal at -300 ppm
278
lies in the region of free amino groups, but does not correspond to the original signal of
279
free SDZ at -309.5 ppm. In both spectra there are, however, clear shoulders at -309.8
280
ppm, which indicate the presence of sequestered or sorbed SDZ (via the pyrimidinyl
281
moiety) able to withstand dialysis. The spectrum of the control experiment containing
282
only laccase and 15N-SDZ (corrected for the signal generated by the enzyme itself and
283
its carrier material) contained one prominent signal at -261 ppm (amide region) and a
284
weak signal at -303 ppm (amino group). The fact that the recorded compounds
285
withstood dialysis suggested that the formed products were reactive enough to either
286
bond or strongly sorb to the carrier material of the enzyme (even though SDZ itself does
287
not) or reacted among each other to form larger entities not able to pass the dialysis
288
membrane. Schwarz et al.19 described a series of possible transformation products of
289
sulfapyridine (SPY). However, only one of the proposed metabolites contained an
290
amide group and all would be small enough to be able to pass the dialysis membrane.
291
Furthermore, during HPLC control of the dialysis no metabolites were detected.
292
However, as the UV detector was set at the optimal wavelength for SDZ possible
293
metabolites with significantly altered structures might have been overlooked. In any
294
case the amount of signal due to reaction between laccase and SDZ was estimated to
295
make up only 10-20 % of the signal of the main experiment. As these reaction products
296
might not form in this particular way in the presence of HAs we refrained from treating
297
this spectrum as background spectrum and subtracting it from the signal of the main
298
experiment spectrum.
299
Contrastingly, the experiments without laccase generated adducts with greater
300
variability in signal intensity (Figure 2b). The spectrum of the IHSS HA adduct
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301
displayed three broad signal regions of similar intensity at around -235, -270 and -300
302
ppm. In the spectrum of the Krauthausen HA adduct several signals of very different
303
intensities were found with the signal at -245 ppm being the smallest and the ones at -
304
303 and -310 ppm the most intense. Both spectra contained a signal at -310 ppm
305
stemming from sequestered SDZ and in the Krauthausen spectrum this signal made up a
306
large portion of the whole signal. The different spectra from both HA adducts formed
307
without laccase showed that the amount of inherent reactive sites were different in both
308
HAs.
309
As chemical shift regions in
15
N-NMR have a stronger overlap than those in
13
C-
310
NMR and to be able to do a more detailed signal assignment of the recorded signals in
311
the NMR spectra, we synthesized model compounds representing possible reactions
312
between the 15N-amino labeled SDZ and the HAs.
313 314
Comparison with synthesized model compounds Figure 3 displays the synthesized model compounds which concurred with the 15
315
signals found in the spectra of the
316
model compounds which had no corresponding signals in the 15N-SDZ-HA spectra.
317
N-SDZ-HA adducts. Figure S9 in the SI shows
The bottom spectrum (Figure 3i) displays the original signal of the
15
N-amino
318
labeled SDZ with a signal at -309.5 ppm. Due to the low sensitivity of the 15N-nucleus
319
the other three nitrogen signals are not visible as they would require much larger scan
320
numbers to reach a reasonable signal-to-noise ratio. This also applies to the spectra of
321
synthesized model compounds (Figure 3c-h) which were all done with
322
labeled SDZ. All tested substituents at the amino group caused the chemical shift of this
323
group to move to lower resonance frequencies. This was caused by the negative
324
inductive effect of the tested substituents reducing the electronic density and thereby the
325
shielding of the amino group. The only exception was the SDZ hydrochloride (Figure
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N-amino
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326
S9) which showed a shift to higher resonance frequencies (-321.9 ppm) in accordance
327
with the higher electronic density of the –NH3+ group.
328
The signal of the unaltered
15
N-SDZ can be found in all four adduct spectra at
329
different intensities. In the laccase mediated adducts the signal is present in the form of
330
a shoulder at around -310 ppm. Part of the
331
physically sorbed or bound to the HAs through the pyrimidinyl moiety. As a covalent
332
binding of the pyrimidinyl moiety would probably alter the chemical shift of the amino
333
group at least a little bit, the most likely argument for the signal at -310 ppm in the
334
adduct is a physical sorption through van-der-Waals binding either of the aromatic ring
335
with the hydrophobic regions of the HAs or through dipole-dipole interactions of the
336
pyrimidinyl moiety with the polar regions of the HAs. In the experiments without
337
laccase the signals of unaltered
338
unequal sorption capacities of both HAs. In the Krauthausen HA the SDZ shoulder in
339
the laccase experiment (Figure 2a) was only slightly higher than in the laccase-free
340
experiment (Figure 2b). In the IHSS HA the difference in the SDZ signal was much
341
larger between the two experiments, indicating that the IHSS HA had a less active
342
sorption surface than Krauthausen HA. Elemental analysis (Table S1) of both HAs
343
revealed that Krauthausen HA contained less carbon, but higher amounts of
344
heteronuclear elements like O, N and S stemming from functional groups, which could
345
explain the different behaviour of both HAs.
15
15
N-amino labeled SDZ is hence either
N-SDZ were very different in intensity indicating
346
The synthesized amide bonds had chemical shifts between -232 ppm (formyl-SDZ,
347
Figure 3c) and -250.5 ppm (trimethoxybenzoyl-SDZ, Figure 3f). The series of
348
substituents showed a decreasing negative inductive effect with larger substituents,
349
which reduced the electronegative pull of the oxygen in the amide bond. The largest
350
reduction in electronic density around the amino-N was achieved with the formyl-
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group. Further reduction can most likely only be achieved with strong electronegative
352
substitutents like chlorine or through a change in the pyrimidinyl moiety. The model
353
substance acetyl-SDZ is also the most easily formed metabolite of SDZ in biological
354
systems. Hence, part of the signal around -245 ppm could also be due to simple
355
sequestration of acetyl-SDZ. However, we found no indication of metabolites during
356
HPLC-control during dialysis and it seems reasonable to assume that in case of
357
formation of larger amounts of acetyl-SDZ part of the metabolite would be soluble and
358
detectable at the same wavelength than SDZ. Furthermore, the signal at -245 ppm is
359
small in the spectra without laccase, which indicated that potentially only small amounts
360
of the metabolite were formed during the time span of our experiments.
361
Michael-addition of SDZ to benzoquinone generated a product with a chemical shift
362
of -261.5 ppm. Hence, Michael adducts of SDZ resonate in the region which is typical
363
for amide/peptide bonds. The signal corresponds to the main signals recorded in the
364
15
365
can be the breakdown of the SDZ molecule, we also considered the possibility of the
366
resulting aniline moiety reacting on its own. We estimated that the deshielding effect of
367
an unsubstituted phenyl ring on the amino-N would be weaker than that of the
368
substituted ring. Hence, to test the magnitude on the chemical shift change we also
369
synthesized a Michael adduct with 15N-labeled aniline and found a chemical shift which
370
was shifted approx. 16 ppm to the high-field side at -278 ppm. This chemical shift
371
matches the shift region between the two main signals and hence part of the recorded
372
signal might be due to reaction of the aniline moiety following SDZ breakdown.
373
Assuming a similar order of magnitude in chemical shift change for amide bonds
374
formed by the aniline moiety the amide signals (Figure 3c to 3f) would shift to a region
375
from approx. -250 to -270 ppm. As the most prominent signal is centered around -245
N-SDZ-HA adducts obtained in the presence of laccase. As one route of attenuation
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376
ppm (Figure 3a) and amide bonds formed by aniline seem to be shifted to the high-field
377
side of this position, we can assume that the main signal is due to reaction products of
378
SDZ rather than aniline.
379
The spectra of the adducts generated without laccase had only a minor signal in the
380
region of amide bonds and Michael adducts. Hence, as already indicated by the uptake
381
rates discussed above, for the formation of amide bonds and Michael adducts the action
382
of an enzyme is necessary to create reactive sites on the HAs.
383
We could exclude the formation of Schiff bases (imines) (Figure S9), which was in
384
line with most studies.43-48 Only one studie using peroxidases to induce enzymatic
385
transformations between SNs and model humic components found imine formation.42
386
As SN Schiff bases might have higher antimicrobial activity than the parent,61 a lack of
387
imine formation reduces the environmental risk of SDZ.
388
None of the synthesized model compounds matched the large signal at -300 ppm in
389
the spectra of the laccase-mediated HA adducts. The down-field shift of only 10 ppm of
390
the original amino-N signal indicates a slight reduction of the electronic density around
391
this nucleus causing only a minor deshielding. All tested covalent bonds, however, had
392
a stronger pull on the electronic shielding and induced a larger downfield shift. Neat
393
aniline has a chemical shift of approx. -325 ppm. Hence, sequestered aniline stemming
394
from a breakdown of the SDZ molecule did also not explain the -300 ppm shift.
395
Comparison with chemical shifts from natural N-containing compounds (Figure S10)
396
and compounds used in previous studies (Figure S11) also revealed no functional
397
groups other than amino groups. Amino groups in aliphatic chains (Figure S10 a, d, e
398
and i), however, resonated at higher fields and amino groups attached to hetero-cycles
399
(Figures S10g and S11f) were shifted to the downfield side of -300 ppm.
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400
We hence hypothesized that this signal shift could be induced by weak H-bridging of
401
the amino-protons. The involvement of these protons in a shared H-bridge would most
402
likely reduce the electronic density, but have a less strong effect than a covalent bond. DFT calculations
403 404
As model compounds with H-bridging of the amino-N could not be synthesized, we
405
used density functional theory (DFT) calculations to compute the theoretical chemical
406
shift of such a compound. In a first step we calibrated the calculations with known
407
chemical shifts and obtained good linear correlations between the calculated and the
408
experimental chemical shifts (Figure S12 in SI). Table 1 shows the calculated and
409
experimental δ values used for calibration. An exemplary H-bridge between
410
benzoquinone and the SDZ-amino-N reduced the electronic shielding of the amino-N by
411
about 4 ppm and the δ value shifted slightly downfield, which is in agreement with and
412
hence supports our hypothesis of H-bridging. Interaction of SDZ with soil
413 414
As breakdown of the SDZ molecule would lead to two separate moieties the
415
incubation experiments with soil were done with SDZ labeled at the amino- and
416
sulfonamido-N in order to be able to follow both moieties. Figure 4 shows the spectrum
417
of a HA isolated from incubated soil after the extractable residues were removed
418
through the sequential extraction procedure. For comparison the background spectrum
419
of the HA and
420
amino sigmal at -309 ppm and a broad signal at -237.5 ppm with two side peaks at -
421
227.5 and -246.5 ppm. The amino signal of the acetyl-SDZ is found at -244.5 ppm,
422
which unfortunately overlaps with the relatively broad signal of the second label. The
423
spectrum of the incubated HA had one broad signal with a maximum at -242 ppm.
424
Contrastingly to the HA study, around -300 ppm only a small signal and almost no
15
N(dl)-SDZ are shown. The spectrum of
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N(dl)-SDZ generated an
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425
amino-SDZ signal was visible. Considering that the HA in this study was exposed to
426
much harsher extraction conditions the lack of a signal in this region confirms our
427
assumption that this signal stems from weaker bonds like H-bridging or sequestered
428
SDZ. As the sulfonamido-N signal overlaps with amide bonds and Michael adducts
429
from the amino-N the broad signal is unfortunately difficult to interprete. However,
430
even if part of the signal is generated by the labeled pyrimidinyl moiety, the spectrum is
431
still comparable to the spectra recorded in the HA study and no additional signals
432
occurred. As for the HA study the study in soil suggested amide bond and Michael
433
adduct formation, but gave no indication of formation of imines. Hence, results from
434
studies peformed on HA rather than whole soil can be used for risk assessment of the
435
qualitative behaviour of SDZ in soil. For quantification the studies would need to be run
436
with an additional 14C-label.
437
Environmental implications
438
In a previous batch incubation study with 14C-SDZ in soil Sittig et al.28 extrapolated,
439
from a series of consecutive microwave assisted extraction steps, that the amount of
440
truly non-extractable residues (NER) increased to approx. 30% of the applied SDZ
441
within 30 days. Batch experiments with sterilized soil generated approx. 10% of NER.
442
These observations are in line with our observation that the presence of laccase caused 3
443
to 4 times larger amounts of adducts to be formed. The largest part of the enzyme-
444
enduced adducts in the HA study was formed by amide formation and Michael adducts
445
to quinone systems as already identified by Bialk et al.44 and Gulkowska et al.46, 47 The
446
second largest part was composed of unaltered sequestered SDZ and SDZ bound by H-
447
bridging of the amino group. These were also the dominating species in the experiments
448
without laccase. In the HA-adducts isolated from the soil incubation study the signals of
449
amide formation and Michael adducts dominated, while only a small signal was found
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450
indicating sequestered or H-bound SDZ. Considering that the HA extraction in the soil
451
study was much harsher than the dialysis in the HA study, we assume that the residues
452
from the soil study are mostly free of loosly bound SDZ. Our study hence indicates that
453
true NER are composed of residues which are covalently bound to soil organic matter
454
and can be considered as bound residues which have become an integral part of the
455
organic matter and where the bioactivity of the compound has been neutralized. The
456
consecutive extraction steps of Sittig et al.28 showed that the fraction of extractable
457
residues cannot be extracted with a single extraction step and, depending on the initial
458
amount of SDZ applied and the soil type, up to 55 extraction steps can be potentially
459
needed to reach an exhaustive extraction of residues. This sticky but potentially
460
extractable fraction is most likely formed by sequestered SDZ and SDZ bound by H-
461
bridging and, even though it might have temporarily lost its antimicrobial activity due to
462
blocking of the amino side chain, still needs to be considered as a potential threat.
463
Sequestration and H-bridging does not require the presence of an enzyme and most
464
likely also no biological activity as these are purely physical and chemical processes
465
which only require the reaction partners to be close enough to one another.
466
We could not identify Schiff base formation in any of the analyzed adducts in our
467
study as found by Bialk et al.42 and Gulkowska et al.46 nor could we identify the
468
formation of N-heterocycles as hypothesized as subsequent incorporation into the soil
469
matrix by Gulkowska et al.46 As already pointed out by Bialk et al.43 imines can be
470
hydrolyzed in aqueous solutions and hence if they formed during our experiments they
471
might have been released into the extractable fraction.
472
The SDZ amount in the present HA study was approx. 2 to 3 orders of magnitude
473
higher (based on amount SDZ per mg soil organic carbon) and the amount applied in
474
the soil study was 1 to 2 orders of magnitude higher than the amounts in the batch study
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475
of Sittig et al.28 Despite these necessary high amounts, in order to be able to record 15N-
476
CPMAS signals, we nevertheless estimate that the identified binding types also occur
477
under natural conditions as the required reaction sites are present in natural soils.44, 47, 63
478
Furthermore, the study was conducted with two different HAs, but generated
479
comparable signals in both. The results differed in the recorded signal strength, which
480
indicated different amounts being formed. Hence, we conclude that the identified
481
binding types will occur in different soils, but the amounts formed will differ depending
482
on the soil type.
483
Supporting Information
484
Text, table and figures on humic acids, HPLC conditions, reaction pathways of SDZ,
485
the synthesis of 15N-SDZ and the model compounds, control experiments, non-corrected
486
15
487
substances, correlation of calculated and experimental chemical shifts.
488
N-NMR spectra,
15
N-spectra of further model compounds and N-containing natural
Acknowledgments
489
We thank Sabine Willbold from ZEA-3 (FZ Jülich) for the elemental analyses of the
490
synthesized model compounds. We gratefully acknowledge the help of Thomas Müller
491
from JSC (FZ Jülich) with the DFT modeling of the
492
project was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) within the Research
493
Unit FOR566 “Veterinary medicines in soils: Basic research for risk assessment”.
15
N-chemical shifts. Part of the
494
References
495 496 497 498
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(51) Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations World reference base for soil resources 2006 - A framework for international classification, correlation and communication; FAO: Rome, Italy, 2006. (52) Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations World reference base for soil resources 2014 - International soil classification system for naming soils and creating legends for soil maps (Update 2015); FAO: Rome, Italy, 2014. (53) Witte, E. G.; Philipp, H.; Vereecken, H. Study of enzyme-catalysed and noncatalysed interactions between soil humic acid and C-13-labelled 2aminobenzothiazole using solid-state C-13 NMR spectroscopy. Org. Geochem. 2002, 33 (12), 1727-1735. (54) Kasteel, R.; Burkhardt, M.; Giesa, S.; Vereecken, H. Characterization of field tracer transport using high-resolution images. Vadose Zone J. 2005, 4 (1), 101-111. (55) Stoob, K.; Singer, H. P.; Stettler, S.; Hartmann, N.; Mueller, S. R.; Stamm, C. H. Exhaustive extraction of sulfonamide antibiotics from aged agricultural soils using pressurized liquid extraction. J. Chromatogr. A 2006, 1128 (1-2), 1-9. (56) Dec, J.; Haider, K.; Benesi, A.; Rangaswamy, V.; Schäffer, A.; Plücken, U.; Bollag, J. M. Analysis of soil-bound residues of C-13-labeled fungicide cyprodinil by NMR spectroscopy. Environ. Sci. Technol. 1997, 31 (4), 1128-1135. (57) Frisch, M. J.; Trucks, G. W.; Schlegel, H. B.; Scuseria, G. E.; Robb, M. A.; Cheeseman, J. R.; Montgomery, J., J. A. ; Vreven, T.; Kudin, K. N.; Burant, J. C.; Millam, J. M.; Iyengar, S. S.; Tomasi, J.; Barone, V.; Mennucci, B.; Cossi, M.; Scalmani, G.; Rega, N.; Petersson, G. A.; Nakatsuji, H.; Hada, M.; Ehara, M.; Toyota, K.; Fukuda, R.; Hasegawa, J.; Ishida, M.; Nakajima, T.; Honda, Y.; Kitao, O.; Nakai, H.; Klene, M.; Li, X.; Knox, J. E.; Hratchian, H. P.; Cross, J. B.; Adamo, C.; Jaramillo, J.; Gomperts, R.; Stratmann, R. E.; Yazyev, O.; Austin, A. J.; Cammi, R.; Pomelli, C.; Ochterski, J. W.; Ayala, P. Y.; Morokuma, K.; Voth, G. A.; Salvador, P.; Dannenberg, J. J.; Zakrzewski, V. G.; Dapprich, S.; Daniels, A. D.; Strain, M. C.; Farkas, O.; Malick, D. K.; Rabuck, A. D.; Raghavachari, K.; Foresman, J. B.; Ortiz, J. V.; Cui, Q.; Baboul, A. G.; Clifford, S.; Cioslowski, J.; Stefanov, B. B.; Liu, G.; Liashenko, A.; Piskorz, P.; Komaromi, I.; Martin, R. L.; Fox, D. J.; Keith, T.; Al-Laham, M. A.; Peng, C. Y.; Nanayakkara, A.; Challacombe, M.; Gill, P. M. W.; Johnson, B. B.; Chen, W.; Wong, M. W.; Gonzalez, C.; Pople, J. A. Gaussian 03, Revision B.03, Gaussian, Inc.: Pittsburgh PA, 2003. (58) Schlüpen, J.; Haegel, F. H.; Kuhlmann, J.; Geisler, H.; Schwuger, M. J. Sorption hysteresis of pyrene on zeolite. Colloid Surf. A-Physicochem. Eng. Asp. 1999, 156 (1-3), 335-347. (59) Sarmah, A. K.; Meyer, M. T.; Boxall, A. B. A. A global perspective on the use, sales, exposure pathways, occurrence, fate and effects of veterinary antibiotics (VAs) in the environment. Chemosphere 2006, 65 (5), 725-759. (60) Knicker, H.; Lüdemann, H. D. N-15 and C-13 CPMAS and solution NMR studies of N-15 enriched plant material during 600 days of microbial degradation. Org. Geochem. 1995, 23 (4), 329-341. (61) Mondal, S.; Mandal, S. M.; Mondal, T. K.; Sinha, C. Spectroscopic characterization, antimicrobial activity, DFT computation and docking studies of sulfonamide Schiff bases. J. Mol. Struct. 2017, 1127, 557-567. (62) Begtrup, M.; Balle, T.; Claramunt, R. M.; Sanz, D.; Jimenez, J. A.; Mo, O.; Yanez, M.; Elguero, J. GIAO ab initio calculations of nuclear shieldings of monosubstituted benzenes and N-substituted pyrazoles. Theochem-J. Mol. Struct. 1998, 453, 255-273. (63) Berns, A. E.; Knicker, H. Soil Organic Matter. eMagRes 2014, 3, 43-54.
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695
Table 1:
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Calculated shielding tensors σcalc and chemical shifts δcalc of SDZ and model substances and experimental chemical shifts δexp.
696 molecule
position
σcalc
δcalc = σref a - σcalc
δexp
[ppm]
[ppm]
[ppm]
calibration with known chemical shifts
697
SDZ
amino-N
181.7
-340.7
-309.5
acetyl-SDZ
amino-N
96.1
-255.1
-244.7
benzoyl-SDZ
amino-N
106.0
-265.0
-250.1
trimethoxybenzoyl-SDZ
amino-N
105.7
-264.7
-250.5
anilino-benzoquinone
amino-N
132.7
-290.7b
-277.8
SDZ-p-benzoquinone
amino-N
131.7
-289.7b
-261.5
benzoyl-SDZ
sulfonamido-N
77.7
-236.3
-240.8
benzoyl-SDZ
pyrimidinyl-N1
-28.2
-130.8
-133.6
benzoyl-SDZ
pyrimidinyl-N2
-32.5
-126.5
-128.1
a
shielding tensor of nitromethane isσref = -159 ppm62 (except for b = -158 ppm)
698
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Figure captions
699 700
Figure 1:
Uptake of 15N-amino labeled SDZ by soil humic acids (HA) in the presence
701
and absence of laccase determined through the determination of free 15N-
702
SDZ in solution. The uptake in the presence of laccase is fitted with y(t) =
703
a1[1 - exp(-k1t)] + a2[1 - exp(-k2t)]0.5 and in the absence of laccase is fitted
704
with y(t) = a[1 - exp(-kt)]0.5. The insert is the square root plot.
705
Figure 2:
Background-corrected 15N-CPMAS NMR spectra of the 15N-SDZ-HA
706
adducts after dialysis. The spectra were recorded on similar amounts of
707
material and with identical scan numbers to allow a rough estimate of the
708
quantities. a) 15N-SDZ-HA adducts formed with laccase (grey: reaction
709
product formed in the absence of humic acid solely with 15N-SDZ and
710
laccase), b) 15N-SDZ-HA adducts formed with laccase. (° = spinning side
711
bands)
712
Figure 3:
Comparison of the 15N-CPMAS NMR spectra of the labeled HA adducts
713
and 15N-labeled synthesized model compounds.
714
a) 15N-SDZ-HA adducts in the presence of laccase (thick line: Krauthausen
715
HA; thin line: IHSS HA); b) 15N-SDZ-HA adducts in the absence of laccase
716
(thick line: Krauthausen HA; thin line: IHSS HA); c) 15N-formyl SDZ; d)
717
15
N-acetyl SDZ; e) 15N-benzoyl SDZ; f) 15N-trimethoxybenzoyl SDZ; g)
718
15
N-SDZ-benzochinon adduct; h) 15N-aniline-benzochinon adduct; i) 15N-
719
amino labeled SDZ. (* = 15N-label; ° = spinning side bands)
720
Figure 4:
15
N-CPMAS NMR spectra of 15N(dl)-SDZ and humic acids extracted from
721
soil incubation experiments with and without 15N(dl)-SDZ after 28 days of
722
incubation. (° = spinning side bands)
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352x198mm (72 x 72 DPI)
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Uptake of 15N-amino labeled SDZ by soil humic acids (HA) in the presence and absence of laccase determined through the determination of free 15N-SDZ in solution. The uptake in the presence of laccase is fitted with y(t) = a1[1 - exp(-k1t)] + a2[1 - exp(-k2t)]0.5 and in the absence of laccase is fitted with y(t) = a[1 - exp(-kt)]0.5. The insert is the square root plot. 1057x793mm (72 x 72 DPI)
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Figure 2: Background-corrected 15N-CPMAS NMR spectra of the 15N-SDZ HA adducts after dialysis. The spectra were recorded on similar amounts of material and with identical scan numbers to allow a rough estimate of the quantities. a) 15N-SDZ-humic acid adducts formed with laccase (grey: reaction product formed in the absence of humic acid solely with 15N-SDZ and laccase, spectra are corrected for background of laccase and its carrier material, heights of spectra are adjusted to roughly fit the amount of laccase in the adduct spectra), b) 15N-SDZ-humic acid adducts formed without laccase. (° = spinning side bands) 1057x1583mm (72 x 72 DPI)
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N-CPMAS NMR spectra of the labeled HA adducts and 15N-labeled synthesized model compounds. a) 15N-SDZ/HA adducts in the presence of laccase (thick line: Krauthausen HA; thin line: IHSS HA); b) 15NSDZ/HA adducts in the absence of laccase (thick line: Krauthausen HA; thin line: IHSS HA); c) 15N-formyl SDZ; d) 15N-acetyl SDZ; e) 15N-benzoyl SDZ; f) 15N-trimethoxybenzoyl SDZ; g) 15N-labeled SDZ/benzochinon adduct; h) 15N-labeled aniline/benzochinon adduct; i) 15N-amino labeled SDZ. (* = 15Nlabel; ° = spinning side bands) Figure 3: Comparison of the
15
1057x1668mm (72 x 72 DPI)
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Figure 4: 15N-CPMAS NMR spectra of 15N-double-labeled SDZ and humic acids extracted from soil incubation experiments with and without 15N-double-labeled SDZ after 28 days of incubation. (° = spinning side bands) 1057x573mm (72 x 72 DPI)
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