Photodegradation of Antibiotics by Noncovalent Porphyrin-Functionalized TiO2 in Water for the Bacterial Antibiotic Resistance Risk Management.
Massimiliano GaetaGiuseppe SanfilippoAurore FraixGiuseppe SortinoMatteo BarcellonaGea Oliveri ContiMaria Elena FragaláMargherita FerranteRoberto PurrelloAlessandro D'UrsoPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2020)
Antibiotics represent essential drugs to contrast the insurgence of bacterial infections in humans and animals. Their extensive use in livestock farming, including aquaculture, has improved production performances and food safety. However, their overuse can implicate a risk of water pollution and related antimicrobial resistance. Consequently, innovative strategies for successfully removing antibiotic contaminants have to be advanced to protect human health. Among them, photodegradation TiO2-driven under solar irradiation appears not only as a promising method, but also a sustainable pathway. Hence, we evaluated several composite TiO2 powders with H2TCPP, CuTCPP, ZnTCPP, and SnT4 porphyrin for this scope in order to explore the effect of porphyrins sensitization on titanium dioxide. The synthesis was realized through a fully non-covalent functionalization in water at room conditions. The efficacy of obtained composite materials was also tested in photodegrading oxolinic acid and oxytetracycline in aqueous solution at micromolar concentrations. Under simulated solar irradiation, TiO2 functionalized with CuTCPP has shown encouraging results in the removal of oxytetracycline from water, by opening the way as new approaches to struggle against antibiotic's pollution and, finally, to represent a new valuable tool of public health.
Keyphrases
- human health
- quantum dots
- risk assessment
- visible light
- public health
- antimicrobial resistance
- heavy metals
- climate change
- photodynamic therapy
- aqueous solution
- particulate matter
- energy transfer
- health risk assessment
- radiation induced
- antibiotic resistance genes
- magnetic resonance imaging
- global health
- anaerobic digestion