Migration and abiotic transformation of estrone (E1) and estrone-3-sulfate (E1-3S) during soil column transport.
Banghao DuWeiwei YuLun YangGongduan FanShuo YangHui JiangShenglan BiCheng YuPublished in: Environmental geochemistry and health (2021)
Steroid estrogens have received worldwide attention and given rise to great challenges of aquatic ecosystems security, posing potential adverse effects on aquatic organisms and human health even at low levels (ng/L). The present study focused on understanding the mobility and abiotic transformation of estrone (E1) and estrone-3-sulfate (E1-3S) over spatial and time scales during soil transport. Column transport experiments showed that the migration capacity of E1-3S was far stronger than E1 in soil. The calculated groundwater ubiquity score and leachability index values also indicated the high leaching mobility of E1-3S. The hydrolysis of E1-3S and abiotic transformation into estradiol and estriol was observed in the sterilized soil. Furthermore, possible transformation products (e.g., SE239, E2378, E1 dimer538, E1-E2 dimer541) of E1 and E1-3S in soil were analyzed and identified after the column transport experiments. The estrogenic activity was estimated by 17β-estradiol equivalency values during the transport process in aqueous and soil phases. Additionally, the potential leaching transport to groundwater of E1-3S requires further critical concern.
Keyphrases
- human health
- risk assessment
- heavy metals
- climate change
- plant growth
- drinking water
- estrogen receptor
- public health
- health risk
- working memory
- health risk assessment
- multidrug resistant
- mass spectrometry
- solid phase extraction
- simultaneous determination
- global health
- water quality
- tandem mass spectrometry
- adverse drug