Characterisation of captopril photolysis and photocatalysis by-products in water by direct infusion, electrospray ionisation, high-resolution mass spectrometry and the assessment of their toxicities.
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2017
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Pharmaceuticals of different therapeutic classes are found in the
environment. Captopril is used worldwide as an antihypertensive
drug, and it has been found in the influent, effluent and secondary
sludge of wastewater treatment plants. Advanced oxidation processes,
such as direct photolysis (UV-C) and heterogeneous photocatalysis
(TiO2/UV-C), are alternatives to enhance mineralisation of
pharmaceuticals and their removal during water treatment. In this
article, it was evaluated the degradation of captopril in aqueous
solution induced by UV-C and TiO2/UV-C systems. The process
focused on the identification and monitoring of the by-products
formed under these conditions by applying direct-infusion electrospray
ionisation high-resolution mass spectrometry in the negative
ion mode (ESI(-)-HRMS) and high-performance liquid
chromatography coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry
(HPLC/HRMS). To evaluate the by-products toxicity, acute ecotoxicity
tests were performed with the crustacean Artemia salina, and
the cytotoxicity was evaluated with (4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-
diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay using HepG2 cells. It was
observed by ESI(-)-HRMS that after 120 min of light exposure,
there was almost complete removal of captopril, with 93.5%
removal efficiency during photolysis and 99.9% during photocatalysis.
At these conditions, the rate of mineralisation, by total
organic carbon (TOC), was only 2.92% for photolysis and 9.09%
for photocatalysis, evidencing the formation of degradation byproducts.
Nine by-products of captopril photodegradation were
identified, and their respective chemical structure elucidations
were proposed. The treated samples were nontoxic to A. salina
and HepG2 cells, indicating that both oxidative treatments (photocatalytic
or photolytic processes) can be conveniently employed to
remove captopril from aqueous media.
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Toxicity assay
Citação
FREITAS, J. R. L. et al. Characterisation of captopril photolysis and photocatalysis by-products in water by direct infusion, electrospray ionisation, high-resolution mass spectrometry and the assessment of their toxicities. International Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry, v. 1, p. 1-14, 2017. Disponível em: <http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/03067319.2016.1276578>. Acesso em: 15 set. 2017.