posted on 2015-04-07, 00:00authored byFangjie Li, Bingqi Jiang, Peter Nastold, Boris
Alexander Kolvenbach, Jianqiu Chen, Lianhong Wang, Hongyan Guo, Philippe François-Xavier Corvini, Rong Ji
The fate of the most commonly used
brominated flame retardant,
tetrabromobisphenol A (TBBPA), in wastewater treatment plants is obscure.
Using a 14C-tracer, we studied TBBPA transformation in
nitrifying activated sludge (NAS). During the 31-day incubation, TBBPA
transformation (half-life 10.3 days) was accompanied by mineralization
(17% of initial TBBPA). Twelve metabolites, including those with single
benzene ring, O-methyl TBBPA ether, and nitro compounds,
were identified. When allylthiourea was added to the sludge to completely
inhibit nitrification, TBBPA transformation was significantly reduced
(half-life 28.9 days), formation of the polar and single-ring metabolites
stopped, but O-methylation was not significantly
affected. Abiotic experiments confirmed the generation of mono- and
dinitro-brominated forms of bisphenol A in NAS by the abiotic nitration
of TBBPA by nitrite, a product of ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms
(AOMs). Three biotic (type II ipso-substitution,
oxidative skeletal cleavage, and O-methylation) and
one abiotic (nitro-debromination) pathways were proposed for TBBPA
transformation in NAS. Apart from O-methylation,
AOMs were involved in three other pathways. Our results are the first
to provide information about the complex metabolism of TBBPA in NAS,
and they are consistent with a determining role for nitrifiers in
TBBPA degradation by initiating its cleavage into single-ring metabolites
that are substrates for the growth of heterotrophic bacteria.