Literature DB >> 31082212

Natural Chlordecone Degradation Revealed by Numerous Transformation Products Characterized in Key French West Indies Environmental Compartments.

Marion L Chevallier1, Oriane Della-Negra1, Sébastien Chaussonnerie1, Agnès Barbance1, Delphine Muselet1, Florian Lagarde1, Ekaterina Darii1, Edgardo Ugarte1, Ewen Lescop2, Nuria Fonknechten1, Jean Weissenbach1, Thierry Woignier3,4, Jean-François Gallard2, Stéphane Vuilleumier5, Gwenaël Imfeld6, Denis Le Paslier1, Pierre-Loïc Saaidi1.   

Abstract

Production and use of the insecticide chlordecone has caused long-term environmental pollution in the James River area and the French West Indies (FWI) that has resulted in acute human-health problems and a social crisis. High levels of chlordecone in FWI soils, even after its ban decades ago, and the absence of detection of transformation products (TPs), have suggested that chlordecone is virtually nonbiodegradable in the environment. Here, we investigated laboratory biodegradation, consisting of bacterial liquid cultures and microcosms inoculated with FWI soils, using a dual nontargeted GC-MS and LC-HRMS approach. In addition to previously reported, partly characterized hydrochlordecones and polychloroindenes (families A and B), we discovered 14 new chlordecone TPs, assigned to four families (B, C, D, and E). Organic synthesis and NMR analyses allowed us to achieve the complete structural elucidation of 19 TPs. Members of TP families A, B, C, and E were detected in soil, sediment, and water samples from Martinique and include 17 TPs not initially found in commercial chlordecone formulations. 2,4,5,6,7-Pentachloroindene was the most prominent TP, with levels similar to those of chlordecone. Overall, our results clearly show that chlordecone pollution extends beyond the parent chlordecone molecule and includes a considerable number of previously undetected TPs. Structural diversity of the identified TPs illustrates the complexity of chlordecone degradation in the environment and raises the possibility of extensive worldwide pollution of soil and aquatic ecosystems by chlordecone TPs.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31082212     DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b06305

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  1 in total

1.  Evidence for extensive anaerobic dechlorination and transformation of the pesticide chlordecone (C10Cl10O) by indigenous microbes in microcosms from Guadeloupe soil.

Authors:  Line Lomheim; Laurent Laquitaine; Suly Rambinaising; Robert Flick; Andrei Starostine; Corine Jean-Marius; Elizabeth A Edwards; Sarra Gaspard
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-04-13       Impact factor: 3.240

  1 in total

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