Literature DB >> 19957116

Bioavailability of xenobiotics in the soil environment.

Arata Katayama1, Raj Bhula, G Richard Burns, Elizabeth Carazo, Allan Felsot, Denis Hamilton, Caroline Harris, Yong-Hwa Kim, Gijs Kleter, Werner Koedel, Jan Linders, J G M Willie Peijnenburg, Aleksandar Sabljic, R Gerald Stephenson, D Kenneth Racke, Baruch Rubin, Keiji Tanaka, John Unsworth, R Donald Wauchope.   

Abstract

It is often presumed that all chemicals in soil are available to microorganisms, plant roots, and soil fauna via dermal exposure. Subsequent bioaccumulation through the food chain may then result in exposure to higher organisms. Using the presumption of total availability, national governments reduce environmental threshold levels of regulated chemicals by increasing guideline safety margins. However, evidence shows that chemical residues in the soil environment are not always bioavailable. Hence, actual chemical exposure levels of biota are much less than concentrations present in soil would suggest. Because "bioavailability" conveys meaning that combines implications of chemical sol persistency, efficacy, and toxicity, insights on the magnitude of a chemicals soil bioavailability is valuable. however, soil bioavailability of chemicals is a complex topic, and is affected by chemical properties, soil properties, species exposed, climate, and interaction processes. In this review, the state-of-art scientific basis for bioavailability is addressed. Key points covered include: definition, factors affecting bioavailability, equations governing key transport and distributive kinetics, and primary methods for estimating bioavailability. Primary transport mechanisms in living organisms, critical to an understanding of bioavailability, also presage the review. Transport of lipophilic chemicals occurs mainly by passive diffusion for all microorganisms, plants, and soil fauna. Therefore, the distribution of a chemical between organisms and soil (bioavailable proportion) follows partition equilibrium theory. However, a chemical's bioavailability does not always follow partition equilibrium theory because of other interactions with soil, such as soil sorption, hysteretic desorption, effects of surfactants in pore water, formation of "bound residue", etc. Bioassays for estimating chemical bioavailability have been introduced with several targeted endpoints: microbial degradation, uptake by higher plants and soil fauna, and toxicity to organisms. However, there bioassays are often time consuming and laborious. Thus, mild extraction methods have been employed to estimate bioavailability of chemicals. Mild methods include sequential extraction using alcohols, hexane/water, supercritical fluids (carbon dioxide), aqueous hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin extraction, polymeric TENAX beads extraction, and poly(dimethylsiloxane)-coated solid-phase microextraction. It should be noted that mild extraction methods may predict bioavailability at the moment when measurements are carried out, but not the changes in bioavailability that may occur over time. Simulation models are needed to estimate better bioavailability as a function of exposure time. In the past, models have progressed significantly by addressing each group of organisms separately: microbial degradation, plant uptake via evapotranspiration processes, and uptake of soil fauna in their habitat. This approach has been used primarily because of wide differences in the physiology and behaviors of such disparate organisms. However, improvement of models is badly needed, Particularly to describe uptake processes by plant and animals that impinge on bioavailability. Although models are required to describe all important factors that may affect chemical bioavailability to individual organisms over time (e.g., sorption/desorption to soil/sediment, volatilization, dissolution, aging, "bound residue" formation, biodegradation, etc.), these models should be simplified, when possible, to limit the number of parameters to the practical minimum. Although significant scientific progress has been made in understanding the complexities in specific methodologies dedicated to determining bioavailability, no method has yet emerged to characterized bioavailability across a wide range of chemicals, organisms, and soils/sediments. The primary aim in studying bioavailability is to define options for addressing bioremediation or environmental toxicity (risk assessment), and that is unlikely to change. Because of its importance in estimating research is needed to more comprehensively address the key environmental issue of "bioavailability of chemicals in soil/sediment."

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Year:  2010        PMID: 19957116     DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4419-1352-4_1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Environ Contam Toxicol        ISSN: 0179-5953            Impact factor:   7.563


  17 in total

1.  Evaluation of epoxiconazole bioavailability in soil to the earthworm Aporrectodea icterica.

Authors:  S Nélieu; G Delarue; E Ollivier; P Awad; F Fraillon; C Pelosi
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2015-08-29       Impact factor: 4.223

2.  Prediction of the Fate of Organic Compounds in the Environment From Their Molecular Properties: A Review.

Authors:  Laure Mamy; Dominique Patureau; Enrique Barriuso; Carole Bedos; Fabienne Bessac; Xavier Louchart; Fabrice Martin-Laurent; Cecile Miege; Pierre Benoit
Journal:  Crit Rev Environ Sci Technol       Date:  2015-06-18       Impact factor: 12.561

3.  Environmental risk of combined emerging pollutants in terrestrial environments: chlorophyll a fluorescence analysis.

Authors:  Víctor González-Naranjo; Karina Boltes; Irene de Bustamante; Pino Palacios-Diaz
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2014-12-05       Impact factor: 4.223

4.  Spatial distribution of potentially bioavailable metals in surface soils of a contaminated sports ground in Galway, Ireland.

Authors:  Ligang Dao; Liam Morrison; Ger Kiely; Chaosheng Zhang
Journal:  Environ Geochem Health       Date:  2012-08-05       Impact factor: 4.609

Review 5.  A review of toxicity and mechanisms of individual and mixtures of heavy metals in the environment.

Authors:  Xiangyang Wu; Samuel J Cobbina; Guanghua Mao; Hai Xu; Zhen Zhang; Liuqing Yang
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2016-03-11       Impact factor: 4.223

6.  Optimization of biomass production by autochthonous Pseudomonas sp. MT1A3 as strategy to apply bioremediation in situ in a chronically hydrocarbon-contaminated soil.

Authors:  Débora Conde Molina; Franco A Liporace; Carla V Quevedo
Journal:  3 Biotech       Date:  2022-04-22       Impact factor: 2.893

Review 7.  Reproductive drugs and environmental contamination: quantum, impact assessment and control strategies.

Authors:  Harpreet Kaur; Madhu Bala; Gulshan Bansal
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2018-07-23       Impact factor: 4.223

8.  Permeability of hair to cadmium, copper and lead in five species of terrestrial mammals and implications in biomonitoring.

Authors:  A N Rendón-Lugo; P Santiago; I Puente-Lee; L León-Paniagua
Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2017-11-18       Impact factor: 2.513

9.  Metabolomic and phenotypic implications of the application of fertilization products containing microcontaminants in lettuce (Lactuca sativa).

Authors:  Víctor Matamoros; Alicia María Rendón-Mera; Benjamí Piña; Đorđe Tadić; Núria Cañameras; Nuria Carazo; J M Bayona
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-05-06       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 10.  Moving persistence assessments into the 21st century: A role for weight-of-evidence and overall persistence.

Authors:  Aaron D Redman; Jens Bietz; John W Davis; Delina Lyon; Erin Maloney; Amelie Ott; Jens C Otte; Frédéric Palais; John R Parsons; Neil Wang
Journal:  Integr Environ Assess Manag       Date:  2021-12-20       Impact factor: 3.084

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