| Literature DB >> 22521104 |
Armando Zarrelli1, Marina DellaGreca, Alice Parolisi, Maria Rosaria Iesce, Flavio Cermola, Fabio Temussi, Marina Isidori, Margherita Lavorgna, Monica Passananti, Lucio Previtera.
Abstract
Nicotine, the main alkaloid of tobacco, is a non- prescription drug to which all members of a tobacco-smoking society are exposed either through direct smoke inhalation or through second-hand passive 'smoking'. Nicotine is also commercially available in some pharmaceutical products and is used worldwide as a botanical insecticide in agriculture. Nicotine dynamics in indoor and outdoor environments as well as the human excretions and the manufacturing process are responsible for its entry in the environment through municipal and industrial wastewater discharges. The presence of nicotine in surface and ground waters points out that it survives a conventional treatment process and persists in potable-water supplies. Complete removal of nicotine is instead reported when additional chlorination steps are used. In this paper a simulation of STP chlorination of nicotine and a genotoxic evaluation of its main degradation products are reported. Under laboratory conditions removal of nicotine seems not to be due to mineralization but to transformation in oxidized and chlorinated products. The by-products have been isolated after fractionation by diverse chromatographic procedures and their structures determined using mass spectrometry and (1)H and (13)C NMR spectroscopy. Preliminary genotoxic SOS Chromotests with Escherichia coli PQ37 evidence no toxicity of the products.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22521104 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2012.03.047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963