Detection of hormones in surface and drinking water in Brazil by LC-ESI-MS/MS and ecotoxicological assessment with Daphnia magna

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 187 - Trang 1-13 - 2015
Nádia Hortense Torres1, Mario Mamede Aguiar2, Luiz Fernando Romanholo Ferreira3,4, Juliana Heloisa Pinê Américo5, Ângela Maria Machado5, Eliane Bezerra Cavalcanti3,4, Valdemar Luiz Tornisielo1
1Ecotoxicology Laboratory, Center for Nuclear Energy in Agriculture, University of Sao Paulo, Piracicaba, Brazil
2Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, USA
3Processes Engineering, Tiradentes University (UNIT), Aracaju, Brazil
4Institute for Technology and Research, Tiradentes University (UNIT), Aracaju, Brazil
5UNESP Aquiculture Center, UNESP. Rua Prof. Paulo Donato Castellane, s/n, Jaboticabal, Brazil

Tóm tắt

The growing use of pharmaceutical drug is mainly due to several diseases in human and in animal husbandry. As these drugs are discharged into waterways via wastewater, they cause a major impact on the environment. Many of these drugs are hormones; in which even at low concentrations can alter metabolic and physiological functions in many organisms. Hormones were found in surface water, groundwater, soil, and sediment at concentrations from nanograms to milligrams per liter of volume—quantities known to cause changes in the endocrine system of aquatic organisms. This study aimed to develop a methodology for hormone detection (estriol, estrone, 17β-estradiol, 17α-ethinylestradiol, progesterone, and testosterone) on surface and treated water samples. Sample toxicity was assessed by ecotoxicology tests using Daphnia magna. A liquid chromatograph coupled to a mass spectrometer with an electrospray ionization source (LC-ESI-MS/MS) was used for the analysis. The results showed that samples were contaminated by the hormones estriol, estrone, progesterone, 17β-estradiol, and 17α-ethinylestradiol during the sampling period, and the highest concentrations measured were 90, 28, 26, 137, and 194 ng·L−1, respectively. This indicates the inflow of sewage containing these hormones at some points in the Piracicaba River in the State of Sao Paulo—Brazil. Results indicated little toxicity of the hormone estriol in D. magna, indicating that chronic studies with this microcrustacean are necessary.

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