Stoichiometric ratios for biotics and xenobiotics capture effective metabolic coupling to re(de)fine biodegradation

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Stoichiometric ratios for biotics and xenobiotics capture effective metabolic coupling to re(de)fine biodegradation
المؤلفون: Nolte, T.M., Peijnenburg, W.J.G.M., Rios- Miguel, A.B., Zhang, Y, Hendriks, A.J.
المصدر: Water Research, 217, pp. 1-16
Water Research, 217:118333. Elsevier BV
Water Research, 217, 1-16
سنة النشر: 2022
مصطلحات موضوعية: Environmental Engineering, Ecological Modeling, Water, Surface water, Wastewater, Pollution, Stoichiometry, Xenobiotics, Biodegradation, Environmental, Metabolism, Ecological Microbiology, Biodegradation, Humans, Organic pollutants, Environmental Pollutants, Waste Management and Disposal, Water Pollutants, Chemical, Environmental Sciences, Water Science and Technology, Civil and Structural Engineering
الوصف: Preserving human and environmental health requires anthropogenic pollutants to be biologically degradable. Depending on concentration, both nutrients and pollutants induce and activate metabolic capacity in the endemic bacterial consortium, which in turn aids their degradation. Knowledge on such 'acclimation' is rarely implemented in risk assessment cost-effectively. As a result, an accurate description of the mechanisms and kinetics of biodegradation remains problematic. In this study, we defined a yield 'effectivity', comprising the effectiveness at which a pollutant (substrate) enhances its own degradation by inducing (biomass) cofactors involved therein. Our architecture for calculation represents the interplay between concentration and metabolism via both stoichiometric and thermodynamic concepts. The calculus for yield 'effectivity' is biochemically intuitive, implicitly embeds co-metabolism and distinguishes 'endogenic' from 'exogenic' substances' reflecting various phenomena in biodegradation and bio-transformation studies. We combined data on half-lives of pollutants/nutrients in wastewater and surface water with transition-state rate theory to obtain also experimental values for effective yields. These quantify the state of acclimation: the portion of biodegradation kinetics attributable to (contributed by) 'natural metabolism', in view of similarity to natural substances. Calculated and experimental values showed statistically significant correspondence. Particularly, carbohydrate metabolism and nucleic acid metabolism appeared relevant for acclimation (R2 = 0.11-0.42), affecting rates up to 104.9(±0.7) times: under steady-state acclimation, a compound stoichiometrically identical to carbohydrates or nucleic acids, is 103.2 to 104.9 times faster aerobically degraded than a compound marginally similar. Our new method, simulating (contribution by) the state of acclimation, supplements existing structure-biodegradation and kinetic models for predicting biodegradation in wastewater and surface water. The accuracy of prediction may increase when characterizing nutrients/co-metabolites in terms of, e.g., elemental analysis. We discuss strengths and limitations of our approach by comparison to empirical and mechanism-based methods.
وصف الملف: application/pdf
تدمد: 0043-1354
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::ff4d7c2bbdfbcb35ceb4af6192467584
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....ff4d7c2bbdfbcb35ceb4af6192467584
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE