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Photochemical transformation of aminoglycoside antibiotics in simulated natural waters Rui Li, Cen Zhao, Bo Yao, Dan Li, Shuwen Yan, Kevin E. O'Shea, and Weihua Song Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b05234 • Publication Date (Web): 17 Feb 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 18, 2016
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Photochemical transformation of aminoglycoside antibiotics in
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simulated natural waters
5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Rui Li1, Cen Zhao2, Bo Yao1, Dan Li1, Shuwen Yan1, Kevin E. O’Shea2, and Weihua Song1,*
1
Department of Environmental Science & Engineering, Fudan University, Shanghai, 200433, China
2
Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Florida International University, Miami, FL, 33199, United States
*corresponding author: email:
[email protected] Tel: (+86)15821951698
Prepared for Environ. Sci. & Technol.
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Abstract Aminoglycoside antibiotics are widely used in human therapy and veterinary medicine. We
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report herein a detailed study on natural organic matter (NOM) photosensitized degradation of
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aminoglycosides in aqueous media under simulated solar irradiation. It appears that the direct
37
reaction of 3NOM* with aminoglycosides is minor. The contributions of reactive oxygen species
38
(ROS) in the bulk solutions, are also unimportant as found by an assessment based on steady state
39
concentrations and bimolecular reaction rate constants in a homogeneous reaction model. The
40
inhibition of the photodegradation by isopropamide is rationalized through competitive sorption with
41
aminoglycosides on the NOM surface, while the addition of isopropanol negligibly affects
42
degradation because it quenches HO• in the bulk solution, but not HO• localized on the NOM surface
43
where aminoglycosides reside. Therefore sorption-enhanced photo transformation mechanism is
44
proposed. The sorption of aminoglycosides on NOM follows dual mode model involving Langmuir-
45
and linear-isotherms. The steady state concentration of HO• on the surface of NOM is calculated as
46
10-14 M, 2 orders of magnitude higher than in the bulk solution. This fundamental information is
47
important in the assessment of the fate and transport of aminoglycosides in aqueous environments.
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Introduction The occurrence, transformation, and risk of antibiotics in the aquatic ecosystems are emerging
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environmental issues, and draw great attention from scientists, engineers and public.1-3 Among
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antibiotics, aminoglycosides are an important group that consists of several aminosugar moieties
53
linked to an aminocyclitol component in their molecule structures. They can bind to the 16S rRNA in
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the small ribosomal subunit of bacteria, causing serious interference in the translation process and
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leading to bacterial death.4-6 Consequently, they exhibit effective antibacterial activity with the
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treatment of both gram-positive and gram-negative infections.7, 8 Aminoglycoside antibiotics have
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been widely used in human therapy against diseases and as veterinary medicines to promote growth
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and prevent infectious diseases.9, 10 Although the possible interactions of these pollutants with living
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organisms in the environment are not well documented, it is highly likely that the aminoglycosides
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exert toxic effects on algae and invertebrates. More important, they can favor the development of
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multi-resistant strains in microorganism.11-14
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A limited number of studies have reported on the detection and transformation of
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aminoglycosides in the aquatic environments, probably due to lack of suitable analytical methods.
64
Hu et al. employed the 9-fluorenylmethyl chloroformate (FMOC-Cl) derivatization method to
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identify 98.2 ± 10.0 ppb aminoglycosides in the waste effluent from a pharmaceutical manufactory.15
66
In the food chemistry, aminoglycosides residues have been widely reported in animal derived food
67
such as milk, meat, egg and so on.16, 17 New analytical methods are needed to identify trace amounts
68
of aminoglycosides in the aquatic environments.
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Previous studies have demonstrated that urban sewage treatment systems may not completely
70
remove antibiotics.18, 19 When antibiotics are utilized in livestock, they may also enter natural waters
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directly or through contaminated manure utilization. A variety of treatment methods have been
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attempted to remove these contaminants, including membrane treatment, ozonation process, and
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adsorption technologies. Photodegradation has also been explored as a feasible method to treat 3
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pharmaceutical contaminants in natural and engineered systems.20-22 The direct photodegradation of
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contaminants requires the overlap of absorption spectra within the irradiation spectrum.23, 24 The
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indirect photodegradation can be promoted via photosensitizers. Natural organic matter (NOM) can
77
function as an effective photosensitizer by absorbing sunlight and reach excited states. Then the
78
excited states of NOM (3NOM*) can react with dissolved oxygen and form a series of reactive
79
oxygen species (ROS), such as singlet oxygen (1O2), superoxide radical (O2•-), hydroxyl radical (HO•)
80
and so on.25-27 Organic contaminants can subsequently be degraded by these ROS or react by transfer
81
of electrons or energy with excited states of photosensitizers.28-30 Previous studies have showed that
82
organic compounds can be adsorbed onto NOM, seriously affecting the rate of contaminant
83
degradation, biological uptake ability, evaporation property and transformation in sediments.31
84
Consequently, the photosensitized degradation process may be altered due to the interaction with
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NOM. Previous studies32, 33 revealed sorption-enhanced indirect photo-transformation of cationic
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histidine and histamine in NOM enriched solutions. The microheterogeneous distribution of 1O2 in
87
irradiated NOM solution leads to overall enhanced reaction rates.34 To our best knowledge, we report
88
herein the first detailed study focused on the microheterogeneous distribution of HO• on the NOM
89
surface.
90
A series of aminoglycosides, streptomycin, kanamycin, gentamycin, tobramycin and amikacin
91
sharing common organic functional groups, are selected as target compounds in this study.
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Streptomycin is the first aminoglycoside antibiotic. Discovered in 1940s, it is still used due to low
93
cost and reliable activity.6, 35 All remaining aminoglycoside antibiotics are widely used in human and
94
veterinary medicine.
95
In this study, a liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method
96
without derivatization was developed to detect the aminoglycosides. A series of experiments were
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conducted to explore the roles of ROS in the photosensitized degradation. Our results suggested
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aminoglycoside antibiotics are adsorbed on NOM and isopropamide was employed to confirm the 4
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role of sorption. Our results indicate that the reaction of aminoglycosides with HO• on the surface of
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NOM, defined as micro-heterogeneous reaction, is critical in photodegradation. In addition the
101
cytotoxicity of the products was assessed and demonstrated that the NOM induced photodegradation
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process can effectively remove the toxicity of aminoglycosides.
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Materials and methods
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Chemicals. Streptomycin (≥ 95%), kanamycin (≥ 94%), tobramycin (≥ 94%) were purchased
105
from TCI (Tokyo Chemical Industry), gentamycin and amikacin (≥ 98%) were purchased from BBI
106
(Bio Basic Inc.), structures are shown in Scheme 1. Furfuryl alcohol (FFA, ≥ 99%),
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furan-2-carbaldehyde (FAD, ≥ 99%), Rose Bengal (RB), terephthalic acid (TA),
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3-methoxyacetophenone, trimethylphenol, isopropanol (IPA), isopropamide, and formic acid were
109
purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. 2-hydroxyl terephthalic acid (2HTA) was synthesized using a
110
literature method.36 Deuterium oxide (D2O, 99.9%) was obtained from Cambridge Isotope
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Laboratories. Methanol and Acetonitrile (J.T. Baker) were of HPLC grade. Compressed nitrogen and
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oxygen were purchased from Fudan Spring Inc. Suwannee river natural organic matter (SRNOM)
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was obtained from the International Humic Substances Society (IHSS). All the prepared solutions
114
contained 2.0 mM phosphate buffer and were adjusted to pH 7.0 using HCl or NaOH.
115
(Insert Scheme 1)
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LC-MS/MS method for aminoglycosides. The concentrations of aminoglycosides were
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determined by LC-triple Quadrupole MS/MS with electrospray ionization source (Agilent
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1290-6430). A sample volume of 15.0 µL was injected into the column (Shiseido, Capcell Pak ST,
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2.0×150 mm) thermostated at 40 oC. The mobile phase was 92% H2O and 8% acetonitrile, both
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containing 0.2% formic acid. The flow rate was 0.3 mL min-1. Mass spectra were obtained in positive
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ion mode and MS parameters were optimized as follows: nebulizer nitrogen gas flow rate (11 L min-1)
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and pressure (35 psi), capillary voltage (4000 V). The details regarding precursor ions and product
123
ions are shown in Table S1, Supporting Information (SI). 5
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Photolysis experiments. To study the direct photolysis, aminoglycoside solutions were
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prepared in ultrapure water with 2.0 mM phosphate buffer (pH = 7.0), and irradiated in a solar
126
simulator (Suntest XLS+) with a 1700W Xenon lamp equipped with 290 nm cut off filter. The
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absolute irradiance spectrum of the solar simulator was recorded using a spectrometer (USB-4000,
128
Ocean Optics Inc.), as illustrated in Figure S1, SI. A temperature control unit (Suncool®) fixed the
129
temperature at 25 °C. To study the indirect photolysis, aminoglycosides (3.0 µM) containing 5.2 mg
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C L-1 SRNOM were exposed to the solar simulator as above. The TOC contents of the solutions were
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acquired using a TOC analyzer (Shimadzu, TOC − CPH/CN). Experiments were performed in D2O
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to explore the role of 1O2. The isopropanol or isopropamide were employed as HO• scavengers. The
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effect of the triplet excited state of NOM was studied in the solutions purged with nitrogen, or
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oxygen gas.
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The bimolecular reaction rate constants of aminoglycosides with HO•. Bimolecular
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reaction rate constants of HO• with five aminoglycosides were determined using electron pulse
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radiolysis. This task was performed at the Notre Dame Radiation Laboratory in US with the 8-MeV
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Titan Beta model TBS-8/16-1S linear accelerator, which has been described elsewhere.37, 38
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Dosimetry was performed using N2O-saturated, 1.00 × 10-2 M KSCN solutions at λ= 472 nm, with
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average doses of 3-5 Gy per 2-3 ns pulse. All experimental data were determined by averaging 8-10
141
replicate pulses using the continuous flow mode of the instrument.
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Since the reaction intermediates of HO• with aminoglycosides do not show UV-vis absorption,
143
the intermediate buildup method could not be applied for rate constant measurement. Therefore the
144
HO• reaction rate constants with aminoglycosides were determined using SCN- competition kinetics
145
based on the monitoring of (SCN)2•- absorption. Eqs 1 and 2 show the respective reactions of
146
aminoglycosides and SCN- with HO•.
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HO•
+
aminoglycosides
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HO•
+
SCN-(+ SCN-)
→
→
H2 O
+ intermediate
(1)
HO-
+ (SCN)2•-
(2)
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This competition can be analyzed to give the expression:
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[(SCN) •2- ]0 k [Aminoglycosides ] = 1+ 1 •[(SCN) 2 ] k 2 [SCN]
(3)
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Where [(SCN)2•-]0 is the absorbance of the transient at 472 nm (A472nm) when only SCN- is present.
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Figure 1 shows that the absorption intensity of (SCN)2•- was gradually reduced as aminoglycosides
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concentration increased, implying competitive involvement of aminoglycosides in HO• reaction with
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SCN-. A plot of eq3 ([(SCN) 2•-]0/[(SCN) 2•-] vs. [Aminoglycosides]/[SCN-]) shows a linear
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correlation with a slope of k1/k2 (Figure 1, Insert). Using k2 (HO• + SCN-) = 1.16 × 1010 M-1 s-1, the rate
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constant for the HO• reaction with aminoglycosides was calculated as k1. The HO• reaction rate
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constants of all five aminoglycosides are in the range of 109 M-1 s-1 and the details are summarized in
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Table S2, SI. These hydroxyl radical reaction rate constants also provide fundamental information
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necessary to apply advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) to the treatment of aqueous aminoglycoside
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wastes. (Insert Figure 1)
161 162
The bimolecular reaction rate constants of aminoglycosides with 1O2. Irradiated solutions
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of RB in distilled water generate 1O2.29 To determine the 1O2 bimolecular reaction rate constants,
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solutions containing 3.0 µM of the aminoglycosides, 1.6 mM FAD and 0.10 mM RB in pH 7.0
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phosphate buffer were irradiated in a solar simulator. Aliquots were removed at time intervals for
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aminoglycosides and FAD analysis using LC-MS/MS and LC-DAD respectively, the details are
167
shown in Text S1, SI. The 1O2 reaction rate constants of all five aminoglycosides are reported in
168
Table S2 of SI.
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The steady state concentrations of ROS under simulated solar irradiation. To study the
170
steady-state concentrations of HO• and 1O2 in bulk solutions, TA and FFA were employed as
171
chemical probes. For HO•, varied concentrations of TA (3.0 to 200 µM) were employed to trap the
172
radical and produce 2HTA, which was measured by HPLC-fluorescence (λexcitation= 315 nm, λemission=
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425 nm). 39 The formation yield of 2HTA was estimated as 0.28 based on the literature.40 The 7
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experimental details and calculations for steady-state concentration of HO• are presented in the Text
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S2 of SI. For 1O2, varied concentrations of FFA were engaged to trap 1O2. The loss of FFA was
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measured by HPLC-UV.41 The details are shown in Text S2, SI.
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Sorption of Aminoglycosides on the NOM. The sorption experiments were performed using
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Molecular weight cut off (MWCO) filter method.42 Aliquots of 4.0 mL aminoglycosides solutions
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with 5.2 mg C L-1 SRNOM were transferred to centrifuge tubes fitted with a 3,000 MWCO filter
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(Millipore Inc.), then centrifuged at 3500 g for 5 mins (Beckman Coulter, Avanti J-26 XPI). Only a
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part of the solutions passed through the MWCO filter membrane. The control experiment of
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centrifuging 5.2 mg C L-1 SRNOM without aminoglycosides was conducted, showing that most of
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SRNOM was retained by the MWCO filter, based on the measurement of UV-vis spectra (Agilent,
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Cary 60) that are shown in Figure S2 of SI. Hence, the MWCO filter is a suitable method to explore
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the adsorption behavior of aminoglycosides on the NOM. Both aliquots of supernatants (sorbed) and
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the effluents (free) were collected for direct LC-MS/MS test. No NOM matrix effect has been
187
observed during the analysis.
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Cytotoxicity assay. The toxicity of streptomycin and aliquots of the irradiated solutions were
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assayed through the inhibition ratios of bioluminescence of the marine bacterium Vibrio fischeri. The
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5 mg freeze dried bacteria were re-suspended in 5 mL of supplemented seawater complete medium
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(SSWC medium, Peptone from casein [5% (w/v)], Yeast extract [0.5% (w/v)], Glycerol [0.3% (v/v)],
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NaCl [3% (w/v)], NaH2PO4 [44.2 mM], K2HPO4 [12.1 mM], MgSO4⋅7 H2O [0.8 mM], (NH4)2HPO4
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[3.8 mM]; pH = 7) and incubated at 20 oC for 24 hrs at 150 rpm. Then the bacterial suspensions were
194
diluted by SSWC medium until the optical density OD600 reached 0.1 and used in the following
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experiments. The tests were performed on 96-well plates. The standard solutions of streptomycin
196
were in the range of 7 nM to 15 µM. The initial concentration of streptomycin (3.0 µM) in solutions
197
subjected to irradiation was outside the sensitive region of the calibration curve and hence these
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solutions were diluted 3 times accordingly before running the assays. The samples and controls were 8
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loaded on the 96-well plates with 100 µL in each well and three duplicates were carried out for each
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sample. Then 100 µL bacterial suspensions were added to each well of the plates, these mixed
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solutions were incubated at 20 oC and at 150 rpm for 12 hrs. Subsequently, bioluminescence was
202
measured with a plate reader (BioTek, Synergy HT), and the inhibition ratios of bioluminescence
203
were calculated for each sample compared with the bioluminescence of a blank control to assess the
204
toxicity of aminoglycosides and their decomposition products. Meanwhile the residual concentration
205
of streptomycin was also measured by LC-MS/MS.
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Results and Discussions The roles of ROS in the photodegradation of aminoglycosides. A series of experiments
207 208
were conducted to explore the photochemical transformation of aminoglycoside antibiotics under
209
simulated solar irradiation. The control experiments showed that the direct photodegradation of
210
aminoglycosides at pH 7.0 in ultrapure water was negligible, as illustrated in Figure 2. It was due to
211
the lack of UV-Vis absorption of aminoglycosides within the solar irradiation spectrum.43, 44 The
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photodegradation of aminoglycosides in the presence of SRNOM was observed, which suggested
213
that photosensitized degradation is critical in the environmental photo-transformation of
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aminoglycosides. The indirect photodegradation followed pseudo first order kinetics, and the rate
215
constants of kanamycin and streptomycin were 0.226 and 0.221 hr-1 respectively.
216
(Insert Figure 2)
217
In order to probe the roles of 3NOM* and ROS in the photolytic process, a series of ROS
218
inhibited/enhanced studies were conducted. To distinguish the influence of 3NOM*, O2 and N2
219
saturated experiments were performed and compared to air saturated condition. Since O2 is known to
220
be a triplet excited state quencher and yield 1O2, in the absence of O2 (under N2 purge) the role of
221
3
222
aminoglycosides degradation in different gas saturated solutions followed the order: oxygen
223
saturated > air saturated > nitrogen saturated, indicating that the direct reaction of aminoglycosides
NOM* would be enhanced while the role of 1O2 would be minimized.45 The rates of
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with 3NOM* is of minor importance. Furthermore 3-methoxyacetophenone, a model compound, is
225
applied to simulate 3NOM*.46 Trimethylphenol is used as a reference compound25 to measure the
226
reactivity of 3NOM* with aminoglycosides. As shown in Figure S3 of SI, the photosensitized
227
reaction rates of 3-methoxyacetophenone with trimethylphenol is 0.0905 ± 0.0018 min-1, which is
228
60-fold faster than the reaction with aminoglycosides (0.0014 ± 0.0008 min-1). Considering that the
229
reaction rate constant of trimethylphenol with typical 3NOM* is reported as 1.8 × 109 M-1 s-1,47 we
230
estimated that the reaction rate constants of aminoglycosides with 3NOM* are less than 3 × 107 M-1
231
s-1. Thus as, it further suggests that the direct reaction of 3NOM* plays a minor role in the
232
photosensitized degradation of aminoglycosides.
233
To explore the roles of 1O2 in the degradation process, SRNOM was dissolved in D2O instead of
234
H2O. The contribution of 1O2 mediated processes is enhanced in D2O, because 1O2 life time is much
235
longer in D2O compared to H2O.28, 29, 48 The deuterium solvent isotope effects (kD/kH) for kanamycin
236
and streptomycin photodegradation are 1.14 and 1.11 respectively, suggesting that 1O2 plays a minor
237
role to remove aminoglycosides under simulated solar irradiation.
238
To explore the role of HO•, a powerful HO• scavenger, isopropanol (52mM), was added to the
239
aminoglycosides/SRNOM solutions. The degradation rates of kanamycin and streptomycin within
240
isopropanol aqueous solutions were 0.197 and 0.206 hr-1 respectively. Compared with the
241
degradation rate of aminoglycosides in SRNOM, only a slight inhibition of photochemical
242
degradation rate was observed, as illustrated in Figure 2. The presence of isopropanol, a HO•
243
scavenger, does not inhibit the photochemical processes. Carbonate radical (CO3•-) can also be an
244
important ROS presented in the sunlit surface water.49, 50 It can be generated through
245
bicarbonate/carbonate trapping of HO• and electron transfer with 3NOM*. As shown in Figure S4 of
246
SI, high concentration of bicarbonate has little impact on the photodegradation rate of
247
aminoglycosides. The results confirm that bicarbonate cannot apparently inhibit or enhance the
248
NOM induced photochemical degradation of aminoglycosides. 10
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To further quantitatively investigate the role of ROS in the photosensitized degradations, the
249 250
steady-state concentrations of 1O2 and HO• in bulk solutions were determined using the chemical
251
probes FFA and TA respectively. As demonstrated in Test S2 of SI, the steady-state concentration of
252
1
253
concentrations and the bimolecular reaction rate constants reported in Table S2, the contributions of
254
both 1O2 and HO• in bulk solutions were less than 7% of total observed degradation. These results
255
were consistent with ROS scavenger/enhanced experiments. Through the experimental results above,
256
the dominating factor in the photodegradation of aminoglycosides remains unclear. We propose that
257
a homogenous description of NOM photochemical process is insufficient to understand the NOM
258
induced photo-transformation of aminoglycosides. With this in mind, we reflect on previous studies
259
demonstrating that 1O2 levels were elevated in the core of NOM and only a small fraction of 1O2
260
could diffuse into the bulk solutions.34 Herein we hypothesized that other ROS (i.e., 3NOM* and HO•)
261
could also have microheterogeneous distributions. NOM-sorbed aminoglycosides could experience
262
enhanced rates of photodegradation due to being exposed to high localized ROS concentrations at or
263
near the surface of NOM. To accurately predict transformation in this system, the sorption of
264
aminoglycosides to NOM was investigated as described below.
265
O2 was (4.46 ± 0.11) × 10-13 M, and HO• was (8.59 ± 0.09) × 10-16 M. Based on the steady state
The micro-heterogeneous reaction in photosensitized degradation. Previous reports suggest
266
that NOM is effective to sorb hydrophobic pollutants through van der Waals interactions.51, 52 This
267
has a profound influence on the transportability, bioavailability, toxicity, and ultimate fate of organic
268
pollutants in natural waters. The interaction of NOM with aminoglycosides could also have a
269
pronounced influence on their photo-transformation. At neutral pH, NOM is negatively charged due
270
to the deprotonation of carboxylic and phenolic moieties.48, 53, 54 Aminoglycosides possess ionizable
271
amino groups, which exist as positively charged forms.55, 56 For example, the two pKa values of
272
kanamycin are 9.52 and 12.94, and for streptomycin they are 11.51 and 13.40 respectively. All
273
aminoglycosides possess positive charges at neutral pH owing to the presence of amino groups.57-59 11
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The electrostatic attraction between the positively charged aminoglycosides and negatively charged
275
NOM could be a major driving force in the strong interactions, which is generally considered to be
276
significantly stronger than the van der Waals interactions often associated with the sorption of
277
organic compounds on NOM. To disturb the strong electrostatic interactions (associations) of
278
cationic aminoglycosides with anionic NOM, isopropamide was added as a cationic HO• scavenger,
279
and compared with isopropanol, a neutral HO• scavenger. Isopropamide and isopropanol share the
280
same isopropyl group, both have similar bimolecular reaction rate constants with HO• and negligible
281
rate constants with other ROS.60-62 However, isopropamide has a positive charge at neutral pH and
282
thus can compete for aminoglycosides on the negatively charged surface of NOM, as showed in
283
Figure S5 of SI. Figure 3 reports that the photodegradation rates of kanamycin and streptomycin
284
were significantly decreased with the addition of varied concentrations of isopropamide, while the
285
addition of isopropanol had no effect. The sorption of aminoglycosides on NOM would thus be
286
critical and generation of HO• at the surface of NOM would play a key role in indirect
287
photodegradation processes. (Insert Figure 3)
288 289
The relationships of photodegradation rates and sorption behaviors among varied
290
aminoglycosides. Based on the above experiments, it is reasonable to envision that the sorption of
291
aminoglycosides on NOM could lead to a faster micro-heterogeneous reaction. Thus, a quantitative
292
investigation of the sorption of various aminoglycosides on NOM was necessary. Unlike soil
293
(sediment)-water systems, the determination of sorption between dissolved matters is challenging.
294
Several research groups have developed dialysis or size exclusion chromatography (SEC) to
295
investigate the sorption of inorganic and hydrophobic pollutants onto natural colloids in aquatic
296
environments.48, 52, 63 With this in mind, MWCO filters were carefully chosen for the sorption studies.
297
This method separates compounds based on the change of apparent molecular size and the details are
298
described in previous studies.54 12
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Our results showed that the sorption was described by a combination model involving
300
Langmuir- and linear- equations for each aminoglycoside (Figure S6 of SI). This dual-mode model
301
involves site-limited adsorption (Langmuir isotherm) and linear absorption (linear isotherm with
302
partition coefficient, Kip), and the resultant combined equation is:
303
=
,
(4)
+
304
As shown in Table 1, the sorption parameters indicated that the Langmuir isotherm portion could be
305
defined as the electrostatic attraction between aminoglycosides and NOM, while the linear isotherm
306
portion could be driven by van der Waals interactions.48, 64 It is apparent that the adsorption
307
(Langmuir isotherm) is significantly stronger than the absorption (linear isotherm). NOM surface had
308
different maximum adsorption capacities as summarized in Table 1. In other words, the NOM
309
adsorption abilities for different aminoglycosides were varied. For streptomycin, the maximum
310
adsorbed concentration on SRNOM was about 580 µmol g-1 C, nearly 50% lower than for other
311
aminoglycosides. Towards other aminoglycosides, the adsorption capacities of NOM were also
312
slightly different. The different adsorption capacities among various aminoglycosides are probably
313
due to the different charge conditions and three-dimensional conformation. Toward streptomycin, the
314
adsorption behavior was quite weak, possibly because the amidine groups of streptomycin hold
315
positive charges more unstable than the general amino groups of other aminoglycosides.65
316 317
(Insert Table 1) The experiments conducted subsequently, confirmed the positive relationship between sorption
318
and photodegradation for all five kinds of aminoglycosides. The photodegradation rate constants
319
using different initial concentrations of each aminoglycoside (from 0.3 µM to 24 µM) with 5.2 mg C
320
L-1 SRNOM irradiated in the same conditions were tested by LC-MS/MS, and the sorption ratios
321
were calculated by the dual-mode model simultaneously. Figure 4a and Figure S7 of SI show that all
322
tested aminoglycosides behave in such a way as to imply that stronger sorption leads to faster
323
degradation rates. While different aminoglycosides present different photodegradation rate constants 13
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324 325
for the same sorption ratios, this is likely due to diverse HO• reaction rate constants. (Insert Figure 4)
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To get further insight, we hypothesized that the efficiency of photodegradation might be
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connected with both the sorption ratios and HO• reaction rate constants. Overall a linear relationship
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between the photodegradation rates and sorption ratios × HO• rate constants was observed, as
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demonstrated in Figure 4b. It further proved the fact that the aminoglycosides share a similar
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degradation mechanism, controlled by HO• from heterogeneous reaction processes.
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Cytotoxicity assessment. In general the photodegradation leads to complex mixtures of
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products in low overall yields. It is a daunting mission to isolate the products and assess their
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individual biological activities. Therefore we applied the luminescent bacteria Vibrio fischeri, to
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assess the cytotoxicity of the treated solutions at various irradiation times. Since all aminoglycosides
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share a similar toxicology mechanism, we only employed streptomycin as a model aminoglycoside
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for cytotoxicity assessment. With Four Parameter Logistic Equation fitting, a calibration curve for
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the bacteria inhibition as a function of the concentration of streptomycin was constructed as
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illustrated in Figure 5a. The inhibition curve of streptomycin showed an IC50 of 0.57 µM. Through
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the standard curve, the residual cytotoxicity of the solutions could be converted to the
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aminoglycoside concentrations. As revealed in Figure 5b, cell toxicity in the mixture decreased as the
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irradiation time was increased. LC-MS/MS determination of the concentration of streptomycin
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indicates that the observed biological activity of the treated samples parallels the concentration of
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streptomycin. It indicated that the streptomycin residual was responsible for most of the cytotoxicity.
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In the other words, it was implied that streptomycin products are not formed to a significant extent
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and/or do not exhibit important toxicity under our experimental conditions. It should be noted that
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we only performed the cytotoxicity test on streptomycin using the luminescent bacteria. The
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potential ecotoxicological effects of photoproducts of aminoglycosides need be addressed to better
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understand the environmental impacts of aminoglycosides. 14
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(Insert Figure 5)
349 350 351
Environmental Significance In this study, the indirect photodegradation mechanisms of aminoglycosides have been
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investigated. Our results suggest that the photodegradation rates of aminoglycosides are linearly
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related with their sorption ratios on NOM. The micro-heterogeneous reaction is dominating for the
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photodegradation in the low concentration range, and HO• on the surface of NOM ([HO•]surface) plays
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a major role. Therefore [HO•]surface could be calculated using the formula:
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357 358 359
! "
Substrate
(5)
= −$%&,' aminoglycoside!HO• !789'
(6)
Considering the [HO•]surface keeps constant during the reaction, :;?@AB>CB>C