Soil microcosms were used to evaluate the potential benefits of an integrated microbial-Fe0 system to treat groundwater contamination by RDX (hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine). Microcosms amended with both Fe0 filings and municipal anaerobic sludge mineralized RDX faster and to a greater extent than separate treatments, with up to 51% 14CO2 recovery after 77 d. The nitroso byproducts 1,3-dinitro-5-nitroso-1,3,5-triazacyclohexane (MNX), 1,3-dinitroso-5-nitro-1,3,5-triazacyclohexane (DNX), and 1,3,5-trinitroso-1,3,5-triazacyclohexane (TNX) were detected in all microcosms, although these compounds never accumulated above 5% of the added RDX on a molar basis. A soluble intermediate that was tentatively identified as methylenedinitramine [(O2NNH)2CH2] was relatively persistent, although it accumulated to a much lower extent in combined-treatment reactors than in sets with Fe0 or sludge alone. Some of the radiolabel was bound to soil and Fe0 and could not be extracted with CH3CN. This fraction, which was recovered by combustion with a biological oxidizer, was also found at lower concentrations in combined-treatment reactors. This work suggests that permeable reactive Fe0 barriers might be an effective approach to intercept and degrade RDX plumes and that treatment efficiency might be enhanced by biogeochemical interactions through bioaugmentation.
Hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine (RDX) was degraded in reed canary grass leaves exposed to simulated sunlight to primary products nitrous oxide and 4-nitro-2,4-diazabutanal. This is the first time that 4-nitro-2,4-diazabutanal, a potentially toxic degradate, has been measured in plant tissues following phytotransformation of RDX. These compounds, along with nitrite and formaldehyde, were also detected in aqueous RDX systems exposed to the same simulated sunlight. Results showed that the initial products of RDX photodegradation in translucent plant tissues were similar to products formed from aqueous photolysis of RDX. Combustion analysis of leaves following 14C-RDX uptake and subsequent light exposure revealed the presence of tissue-bound material that could not be extracted with acetonitrile. No detectable formaldehyde was emitted from the leaves. The detection of similar RDX degradation products in both aqueous and plant-based systems suggests that RDX may be initially transformed by similar mechanisms in both systems. Direct photolysis of RDX via ultraviolet irradiation passing into the leaves is hypothesized to be responsible for the observed transformations. In addition, membrane-bound "trap chlorophyll" in the chloroplasts may shuttle electrons to RDX as an indirect photolysis transformation mechanism. Results from this study indicate that reed canary grass facilitates photochemical degradation of RDX, and this mechanism should be considered along with more established phytoremediation processes when assessing the fate of contaminants in plant tissues. Plant-mediated phototransformation of xenobiotic compounds is a process that may be termed "phytophotolysis".
Cutaneous melanoma has the lowest survival rate of all forms of skin cancer. There has been little research investigating the link between arsenic and cutaneous melanoma, although arsenic has been associated with increased risk of nonmelanoma skin cancer. The authors performed a case-control study examining the association between cutaneous melanoma and environmental arsenic exposure among Iowans aged 40 years or older. Participants included 368 cutaneous melanoma cases and 373 colorectal cancer controls diagnosed in 1999 or 2000, frequency matched on gender and age. Participants completed a mailed survey and submitted toenail clippings for analysis of arsenic content by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrophotometry. The authors found an increased risk of melanoma for participants with elevated toenail arsenic concentrations (odds ratio = 2.1, 95 percent confidence interval: 1.4, 3.3; p-trend = 0.001) and effect modification by prior skin cancer diagnosis (p-interaction = 0.03). The arsenic-melanoma findings in this study are not known to have been previously reported in observational epidemiologic studies involving incident cutaneous melanoma. Therefore, the findings warrant confirmation.
Poplar tissue cultures and leaf crude extracts (Populus deltoides x nigra DN-34) were exposed to [U-14C]hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine (RDX) and incubated under light and in the dark. Poplar tissue cultures were able to partially reduce RDX to hexahydro-1-nitroso-3,5-dinitro-1,3,5-triazine (MNX) and hexahydro-1,3-dinitroso-5-nitro-1,3,5-triazine (DNX), regardless of the presence or absence of light. However, further transformation of RDX, MNX, and DNX required exposure to light and resulted in the formation of formaldehyde (CH2O), methanol (CH3OH), and carbon dioxide (CO2). Similarly, transformation of RDX by poplar leaf crude extracts required exposure to light. Neither reduction of RDX to MNX and DNX nor mineralization into CO2 were recorded in crude extracts, even when exposed to light, suggesting that both processes were light-independent and required intact plant cells. Control experiments without plant material showed that RDX was partially transformed abiotically, by the sole action of light, but to a lesser extent than in the presence of plant crude extracts, suggesting the intervention of plant subcellular structures through a light-mediated mechanism. Poplar tissue cultures were also shown to mineralize 14CH2O and 14CH3OH, regardless of the presence or absence of light. These results suggest that transformation of [U-14C]RDX by plant tissue cultures may occur through a three-step process, involving (i) a light-independent reduction of RDX to MNX and DNX by intact plant cells; (ii) a plant/light-mediated breakdown of the heterocyclic ring of RDX, MNX, or DNX into C1-labeled metabolites (CH2O and CH3OH); and (iii) a further light-independent mineralization of C1-labeled metabolites by intact plant cells. This is the first time that a significant mineralization of RDX into CO2 by light-exposed plant tissue cultures is reported.
Studies of environmental and toxic effects of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are ideally performed with PCB mixtures reflecting the composition of environmental PCB profiles to mimic actual effects and to account for complex interactions among individual PCB congeners. Unfortunately, only a few laboratory studies employing synthetic PCB mixtures have been reported, in part because of the challenges associated with the preparation of complex PCB mixtures containing many individual PCB congeners. The objective of this study was to develop a PCB mixture that resembles the average PCB profile recorded from 1996 to 2002 at a satellite station of the Integrated Atmospheric Deposition Network located at the Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT) in Chicago, Illinois, using commercial PCB mixtures. Initial simulations, using published Aroclor profiles, showed that a mixture containing 65% Aroclor 1242 and 35% Aroclor 1254 was a good approximation of the target profile. A synthetic Chicago air mixture (CAM) was prepared by mixing the respective Aroclor's in this ratio, followed by GC/MS/MS analysis. Comparison of the PCB profile of the synthetic mixture with the target profile suggests that the synthetic PCB mixture is a good approximation of the average IIT Chicago air profiles (similarity coefficient cos θ = 0.82; average relative percent difference = 84%). The synthetic CAM was also a reasonable approximation of the average of 184 PCB profiles analyzed in 2007 at 37 sites throughout Chicago as part of the University of Iowa Superfund Basic Research Program (isbrp), with a cos θ of 0.70 and an average relative percent difference of 118%. While the CAM and the two Chicago air profiles contained primarily di- to pentachlorobiphenyls, higher chlorinated congeners, including congeners with seven or eight chlorine atoms, were underrepresented in the synthetic CAM. The calculated TCDD toxic equivalency quotients of the synthetic CAM (2.7 ng/mg PCB) and the IIT Chicago air profile (1.6 ng/mg PCB) were comparable, but lower by two orders of magnitude than the isbrp Chicago air profile (865 ng/mg PCB) due to surprisingly high PCB 126 levels in Chicago air. In contrast, the calculated neurotoxic equivalency quotients of the CAM (0.33 mg/mg PCB) and the two Chicago air profiles (0.44 and 0.30 mg/mg PCB, respectively) were similar. This study demonstrates the challenges and methods of creating and characterizing synthetic, environmental mixtures of PCBs.
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