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  • Benchmarking organic micropollutants in wastewater, recycled water and drinking water with in vitro bioassays

    Author(s)
    Escher, Beate I
    Allinson, Mayumi
    Altenburger, Rolf
    Bain, Peter A
    Balaguer, Patrick
    Busch, Wibke
    Crago, Jordan
    Denslow, Nancy D
    Dopp, Elke
    Hilscherova, Klara
    Humpage, Andrew R
    Kumar, Anu
    Grimaldi, Marina
    Jayasinghe, B Sumith
    Jarosova, Barbora
    Jia, Ai
    Makarov, Sergei
    Maruya, Keith A
    Medvedev, Alex
    Mehinto, Alvine C
    Mendez, Jamie E
    Poulsen, Anita
    Prochazka, Erik
    Richard, Jessica
    Schifferli, Andrea
    Schlenk, Daniel
    Scholz, Stefan
    Shiraish, Fujio
    Snyder, Shane
    Su, Guanyong
    Tang, Janet YM
    van der Burg, Bart
    van der Linden, Sander C
    Werner, Inge
    Westerheide, Sandy D
    Wong, Chris KC
    Yang, Min
    Yeung, Bonnie HY
    Zhang, Xiaowei
    Leusch, Frederic DL
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Leusch, Frederic
    Year published
    2014
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Thousands of organic micropollutants and their transformation products occur in water. Although often present at low concentrations, individual compounds contribute to mixture effects. Cell-based bioassays that target health-relevant biological endpoints may therefore complement chemical analysis for water quality assessment. The objective of this study was to evaluate cell-based bioassays for their suitability to benchmark water quality and to assess efficacy of water treatment processes. The selected bioassays cover relevant steps in the toxicity pathways including induction of xenobiotic metabolism, specific and reactive ...
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    Thousands of organic micropollutants and their transformation products occur in water. Although often present at low concentrations, individual compounds contribute to mixture effects. Cell-based bioassays that target health-relevant biological endpoints may therefore complement chemical analysis for water quality assessment. The objective of this study was to evaluate cell-based bioassays for their suitability to benchmark water quality and to assess efficacy of water treatment processes. The selected bioassays cover relevant steps in the toxicity pathways including induction of xenobiotic metabolism, specific and reactive modes of toxic action, activation of adaptive stress response pathways and system responses. Twenty laboratories applied 103 unique in vitro bioassays to a common set of 10 water samples collected in Australia, including wastewater treatment plant effluent, two types of recycled water (reverse osmosis and ozonation/activated carbon filtration), stormwater, surface water, and drinking water. Sixty-five bioassays (63%) showed positive results in at least one sample, typically in wastewater treatment plant effluent, and only five (5%) were positive in the control (ultrapure water). Each water type had a characteristic bioanalytical profile with particular groups of toxicity pathways either consistently responsive or not responsive across test systems. The most responsive health-relevant endpoints were related to xenobiotic metabolism (pregnane X and aryl hydrocarbon receptors), hormone-mediated modes of action (mainly related to the estrogen, glucocorticoid, and antiandrogen activities), reactive modes of action (genotoxicity) and adaptive stress response pathway (oxidative stress response). This study has demonstrated that selected cell-based bioassays are suitable to benchmark water quality and it is recommended to use a purpose-tailored panel of bioassays for routine monitoring.
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    Journal Title
    Environmental Science & Technology
    Volume
    48
    Issue
    3
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1021/es403899t
    Copyright Statement
    Self-archiving of the author-manuscript version is not yet supported by this journal. Please refer to the journal link for access to the definitive, published version or contact the authors for more information.
    Subject
    Analytical biochemistry
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/61906
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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