Covalent Binding of Sulfamethazine to Natural and
Synthetic Humic Acids: Assessing Laccase Catalysis and Covalent Bond
Stability
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Abstract
Sulfonamide antibiotics form stable
covalent bonds with quinone
moieties in organic matter via nucleophilic addition reactions. In
this work, we combined analytical electrochemistry with trace analytics
to assess the catalytic role of the oxidoreductase laccase in the
binding of sulfamethazine (SMZ) to Leonardite humic acid (LHA) and
to four synthetic humic acids (SHAs) polymerized from low molecular
weight precursors and to determine the stability of the formed bonds.
In the absence of laccase, a significant portion of the added SMZ
formed covalent bonds with LHA, but only a very small fraction (<0.4%)
of the total quinone moieties in LHA reacted. Increasing absolute,
but decreasing relative concentrations of SMZ–LHA covalent
bonds with increasing initial SMZ concentration suggested that the
quinone moieties in LHA covered a wide distribution in reactivity
for the nucleophilic addition of SMZ. Laccase catalyzed the formation
of covalent bonds by oxidizing unreactive hydroquinone moieties in
LHA to reactive, electrophilic quinone moieties, of which a large
fraction (5%) reacted with SMZ. Compared to LHA, the SHA showed enhanced
covalent bond formation in the absence of laccase, suggesting a higher
reactivity of their quinone moieties toward nucleophilic addition.
This work supports that binding to soil organic matter (SOM) is an
important process governing the fate, bioactivity, and extractability
of sulfonamides in soils