Identification of polar bioactive substances in the Upper Rhine using effect-directed analysis

Timur Baygildiev*, Jeroen Meijer, Peter Cenijn, Marcel Riegel, Hans Peter H. Arp, Marja Lamoree, Timo Hamers

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Effect-Directed Analysis (EDA) was used to identify bioactive compounds in surface and well water from the Upper Rhine, and to evaluate their properties against the criteria set for Persistent, Mobile and Toxic (PMT) and very persistent and very mobile (vPvM) substances. A multi-layered solid-phase extraction was implemented to enrich a broad range of polar substances from the collected samples. The extracts were fractionated into 108 fractions and tested in the transthyretin (TTR)-binding assay measuring displacement of fluorescently labeled thyroxine (FITC-T4 TTR-binding assay) and the Aliivibrio fischeri bioluminescence (AFB) bioassay. Bioactive fractions guided the identification strategy using high-resolution mass spectrometry. Chemical features were systematically annotated using library databases and suspect lists, incorporating an automated assessment of the quality of each annotation. Based on this assessment, each chemical feature was assigned a specific identification confidence level. Identification of bioactive compounds was facilitated by using bioassay specific suspect lists that were extracted from an in-house developed database of positive and negative TTR-binding compounds and from a recently published database of active inhibitors of AFB. This resulted in the identification and confirmation of ten bioactive substances, including four evaluated as PMT and vPvM substances (diclofenac, trifloxystrobin acid, 6:2 FTSA and PFOA), and one as a potential PMT substance (4-aminoazobenzene). This study demonstrates the effectiveness of EDA in the identification of PMT/vPvM substances in the aquatic environment, facilitating their prioritization for comprehensive environmental risk assessment and possible regulation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number122607
Pages (from-to)1-13
Number of pages13
JournalWater Research
Volume268
Early online date11 Oct 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s)

Funding

Funding was provided from the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under grant agreement 101036756 (ZeroPM).

FundersFunder number
Horizon 2020
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme101036756

    Keywords

    • Bioassays
    • Effect-directed analysis
    • High resolution mass spectrometry
    • Multi-layered SPE
    • Polar environmental contaminants
    • Suspect and non-target screening

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