Bioavailability
of Antibiotics at Soil–Water
Interfaces: A Comparison of Measured Activities and Equilibrium Partitioning
Estimates
Posted on 2018-04-09 - 00:00
There are growing concerns that antibiotic
pollution impacts environmental
microbiota and facilitates the propagation of antibiotic resistance.
However, the prediction or analytical determination of bioavailable
concentrations of antibiotics in soil is still subject to great uncertainty.
Biological assays are increasingly recognized as valuable complementary
tools that allow a more direct determination of the residual antibiotic
activity. This study assessed the bioavailability of structurally
diverse antibiotics at a soil–water interface applying activity-based
analyses in conjunction with equilibrium partitioning (EqP) modeling.
The activity against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria of nine
antibiotics from different classes was determined in the presence
and absence of standard soil (LUFA St. 2.2). The addition of soil
affected the activity of different antibiotics to highly varying degrees.
Moreover, a highly significant correlation (p <
0.0001) between the experimentally observed and the EqP-derived log
EC50 (half-maximal effective concentration) values was
observed. The innovative experimental design of this study provided
new insights on the bioavailability of antibiotics at soil–water
interfaces. EqP appears to be applicable to a broad range of antibiotics
for the purpose of screening-level risk assessment. However, EqP estimates
cannot replace soil-specific ecotoxicity testing in higher-tier assessments,
since their accuracy is still compromised by a number of factors.
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Menz, Jakob; Müller, Julia; Olsson, Oliver; Kümmerer, Klaus (2018). Bioavailability
of Antibiotics at Soil–Water
Interfaces: A Comparison of Measured Activities and Equilibrium Partitioning
Estimates. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.7b06329