Literature DB >> 28967568

Antimicrobial activity of pharmaceutical cocktails in sewage treatment plant effluent - An experimental and predictive approach to mixture risk assessment.

Jakob Menz1, Ewelina Baginska1, Åsa Arrhenius2, Annette Haiß1, Thomas Backhaus2, Klaus Kümmerer3.   

Abstract

Municipal wastewater contains multi-component mixtures of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). This could shape microbial communities in sewage treatment plants (STPs) and the effluent-receiving ecosystems. In this paper we assess the risk of antimicrobial effects in STPs and the aquatic environment for a mixture of 18 APIs that was previously detected in the effluent of a European municipal STP. Effects on microbial consortia (collected from a separate STP) were determined using respirometry, enumeration of culturable microorganisms and community-level physiological profiling. The mixture toxicity against selected bacteria was assessed using assays with Pseudomonas putida and Vibrio fischeri. Additional data on the toxicity to environmental bacteria were compiled from literature in order to assess the individual and expected joint bacterial toxicity of the pharmaceuticals in the mixture. The reported effluent concentration of the mixture was 15.4 nmol/l and the lowest experimentally obtained effect concentrations (EC10) were 242 nmol/l for microbial consortia in STPs, 225 nmol/l for P. putida and 73 nmol/l for V. fischeri. The lowest published effect concentrations (EC50) of the individual antibiotics in the mixture range between 15 and 150 nmol/l, whereas 0.9-190 μmol/l was the range of bacterial EC50 values found for the non-antibiotic mixture components. Pharmaceutical cocktails could shape microbial communities at concentrations relevant to STPs and the effluent receiving aquatic environment. The risk of antimicrobial mixture effects was completely dominated by the presence of antibiotics, whereas other pharmaceutical classes contributed only negligibly to the mixture toxicity. The joint bacterial toxicity can be accurately predicted from the individual toxicity of the mixture components, provided that standardized data on representative bacterial strains becomes available for all relevant compounds. These findings argue for a more sophisticated bacterial toxicity assessment of environmentally relevant pharmaceuticals, especially for those with a mode of action that is known to specifically affect prokaryotic microorganisms.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Antibiotics; Environmental bacteria; Microbial communities; Mixture toxicity

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28967568     DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2017.09.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Pollut        ISSN: 0269-7491            Impact factor:   8.071


  3 in total

1.  Pharmaceutical biotechnological potential of filamentous fungi isolated from textile industry.

Authors:  Suzan Prado Fernandes Bernal; Micaela Andrea Gritti; Viviane Piccin Dos Santos; Júlia Ronzella Ottoni; Valéria Maia de Oliveira; Maria Elisa Peichoto; Michel Rodrigo Zambrano Passarini
Journal:  Arch Microbiol       Date:  2021-05-21       Impact factor: 2.552

Review 2.  Current advances on the photocatalytic degradation of fluoroquinolones: photoreaction mechanism and environmental application.

Authors:  Luca Pretali; Elisa Fasani; Michela Sturini
Journal:  Photochem Photobiol Sci       Date:  2022-04-13       Impact factor: 4.328

3.  TiO2 and N-TiO2 Sepiolite and Zeolite Composites for Photocatalytic Removal of Ofloxacin from Polluted Water.

Authors:  Michela Sturini; Federica Maraschi; Alice Cantalupi; Luca Pretali; Stefania Nicolis; Daniele Dondi; Antonella Profumo; Valentina Caratto; Elisa Sanguineti; Maurizio Ferretti; Angelo Albini
Journal:  Materials (Basel)       Date:  2020-01-23       Impact factor: 3.623

  3 in total

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