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Maize ( Zea mays L.) Plants Alter the Fate and Accumulate Nonextractable Residues of Sulfamethoxazole in Farmland Soil.

Xuan WuFeifei SunSiqi CaoQilin WangLianhong WangSongfeng WangYan HeBoris Alexander KolvenbachPhilippe Francois-Xavier CorviniRong Ji
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2024)
The fate of sulfonamide antibiotics in farmlands is crucial for food and ecological safety, yet it remains unclear. We used [phenyl-U- 14 C]-labeled sulfamethoxazole ( 14 C-SMX) to quantitatively investigate the fate of SMX in a soil-maize system for 60 days, based on a six-pool fate model. Formation of nonextractable residues (NERs) was the predominant fate for SMX in unplanted soil, accompanied by minor mineralization. Notably, maize plants significantly increased SMX dissipation (kinetic constant k d = 0.30 day -1 vs 0.17 day -1 ), while substantially reducing the NER formation (92% vs 58% of initially applied SMX) and accumulating SMX (40%, mostly bound to roots). Significant NERs (maximal 29-42%) were formed via physicochemical entrapment (determined using silylation), which could partially be released and taken up by maize plants. The NERs consisted of a considerable amount of SMX formed via entrapment (1-8%) and alkali-hydrolyzable covalent bonds (2-12%, possibly amide linkage). Six and 10 transformation products were quantified in soil extracts and NERs, respectively, including products of hydroxyl substitution, deamination, and N -acylation, among which N -lactylated SMX was found for the first time. Our findings reveal the composition and instability of SMX-derived NERs in the soil-plant system and underscore the need to study the long-term impacts of reversible NERs.
Keyphrases
  • plant growth
  • genome wide
  • heavy metals
  • blood pressure
  • climate change
  • heart rate
  • computed tomography
  • dna methylation
  • human health
  • single cell
  • human immunodeficiency virus