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  • Biodegradation studies of N4-acetylsulfapyridine and N4-acetylsulfamethazine in environmental water by applying mass spectrometry techniques.

Biodegradation studies of N4-acetylsulfapyridine and N4-acetylsulfamethazine in environmental water by applying mass spectrometry techniques.

Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry (2012-02-22)
María Jesús García-Galán, Tobias Frömel, Jutta Müller, Manuela Peschka, Thomas Knepper, Silvia Díaz-Cruz, Damiá Barceló
ABSTRACT

This work evaluates the biodegradation of N(4)-acetylsulfapyridine (AcSPY) and N(4)-acetylsulfamethazine (AcSMZ), metabolites of two of the most commonly used sulfonamides (SAs) in human and veterinary medicine, respectively. Aerobic transformation in effluent wastewater was simulated using aerated fixed-bed bioreactors. No visible changes in concentration were observed in the AcSMZ reactor after 90 days, whereas AcSPY was fully degraded after 32 days of experiment. It was also demonstrated that AcSPY transformed back to its parent compound sulfapyridine (SPY). The environmental presence of these two metabolites in wastewater effluent had been previously investigated and confirmed, together with three more SA acetylated metabolites and their corresponding parent compounds, in 18 different wastewater treatment plants in Hesse (Germany). Sulfamethoxazole (SMX) and SPY were the two SAs detected most frequently (90% and 89% of the samples, respectively) and in the highest concentrations (682 ng L(-1) for SMX and 532 ng L(-1) for SPY). To conclude, hazard quotients were calculated whenever toxicity data were available. None of the SAs studied posed an environmental risk.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Supelco
Sulfamethazine, VETRANAL®, analytical standard
Supelco
Sulfapyridine melting point standard, Pharmaceutical Secondary Standard; Certified Reference Material
Supelco
Sulfapyridine, VETRANAL®, analytical standard
Sigma-Aldrich
Sulfamethazine, 99.0-101.0% (on dried basis)
Supelco
Sulfapyridine, ≥99.0%