Photodegradation
of Veterinary Ionophore Antibiotics
under UV and Solar Irradiation
- Publication date
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Abstract
The veterinary ionophore antibiotics
(IPAs) are extensively used
as coccidiostats and growth promoters and are released to the environment
via land application of animal waste. Due to their propensity to be
transported with runoff, IPAs likely end up in surface waters where
they are subject to photodegradation. This study is among the first
to investigate the photodegradation of three commonly used IPAs, monensin
(MON), salinomycin (SAL) and narasin (NAR), under UV and solar irradiation.
Results showed that MON was persistent in a deionized (DI) water matrix
when exposed to UV and sunlight, whereas SAL and NAR could undergo
direct photolysis with a high quantum yield. Water components including
nitrate and dissolved organic matter had a great impact on the photodegradation
of IPAs. A pseudosteady state kinetic model was successfully applied
to predict IPAs’ photodegradation rates in real water matrices.
Applying LC/MS/MS, multiple photolytic transformation products of
IPAs were observed and their structures were proposed. The direct
photolysis of SAL and NAR occurred via cleavage on the ketone moiety
and self-sensitized photolysis. With the presence of nitrate, MON
was primarily degraded by hydroxyl radicals, whereas SAL showed reactivity
toward both hydroxyl and nitrogen-dioxide radicals. Additionally,
toxicity tests showed that photodegradation of SAL eliminated its
antibiotic properties against <i>Bacillus subtilis</i>