Artigo Revisado por pares

Dissipation of pterosin B in acid soils – Tracking the fate of the bracken fern carcinogen ptaquiloside

2016; Elsevier BV; Volume: 165; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.chemosphere.2016.09.050

ISSN

1879-1298

Autores

Eirini Skourti-Stathaki, Frederik Clauson‐Kaas, Kristian K. Brandt, Lars Holm Rasmussen, Hans Christian Bruun Hansen,

Tópico(s)

Glutathione Transferases and Polymorphisms

Resumo

Bracken ferns (Pteridium spp.) are well-known for their carcinogenic properties, which are ascribed to the content of ptaquiloside and ptaquiloside-like substances. Ptaquiloside leach from the ferns and may cause contamination of drinking water. Pterosin B is formed by hydrolysis of ptaquiloside. In soil, Pterosin B is adsorbed more strongly and it is expected to have a slower turnover than ptaquiloside. We thus hypothesized that pterosin B may serve as an indicator for any past presence of ptaquiloside. Pterosin B degradation was studied in acid forest soils from bracken-covered and bracken-free areas. Soil samples were incubated with pterosin B at 3 and 8 μg g−1 for 10 days, whereas sterile (autoclaved) samples were incubated for 23 days. Pterosin B showed unexpected fast degradation in soils with full degradation in topsoils in 2–5 days. Pterosin B dissipation followed the sum of two-first order reactions. The initial fast reaction with half-lives of 0.7–3.5 h contributed 11–59% of the total pterosin B degradation, while the slow reaction was 20–100 times slower than the fast reaction. Total dissipation half-lives were shorter for loamy sand (4 h) than for sandy loam soils (28 h). No degradation of pterosin B took place under sterile conditions assuming observed dissipation during the first 3 h could be attributed to irreversible sorption. Our results demonstrate that pterosin B is microbially degraded and that pterosin B is as unstable as ptaquiloside and hence cannot be used as an indicator for former presence of ptaquiloside in soil.

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