Investigating (anti)estrogenic activities within South African wastewater and receiving surface waters: Implication for reliable monitoring
Autor: | Nico van Blerk, Gideon M. Wolfaardt, Edward Archer, Johannes H. van Wyk |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Pollution
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences Health Toxicology and Mutagenesis media_common.quotation_subject 010501 environmental sciences Endocrine Disruptors Wastewater Toxicology 01 natural sciences Rivers Bioassay Humans Effluent 0105 earth and related environmental sciences media_common Pollutant Estrogen receptor binding Aquatic ecosystem Estrogens General Medicine Environmental chemistry Environmental science Sewage treatment Biological Assay Water Pollutants Chemical Environmental Monitoring |
Zdroj: | Environmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987). 263 |
ISSN: | 1873-6424 |
Popis: | Natural and synthetic steroid hormones and many persistent organic pollutants are of concern for their endocrine-disrupting activities observed in receiving surface waters. Apart from the demonstrated presence of estrogen- and estrogen-mimicking compounds in surface waters, antagonistic (anti-estrogenic) responses originating from wastewater effluent have been reported but are less known. Estrogenicity and anti-estrogenicity were assessed using recombinant yeast estrogen receptor binding assays (YES/YAES) at ten South African wastewater treatment works (WWTWs) and receiving rivers in two separate sampling campaigns during the summer- and winter periods in the area. Four WWTWs were then further investigated to show daily variation in estrogenic endocrine-disrupting activities during the treatment process. Although estrogenicity was notably reduced at most of the WWTWs, some treated effluent and river water samples were shown to be above effect-based trigger values posing an endocrine-disrupting risk for aquatic life and potential health risks for humans. Furthermore, estrogenicity recorded in samples collected upstream from some WWTW discharge points also exceeded some calculated risk trigger values, which highlights the impact of alternative pollution sources contributing towards endocrine disrupting contaminants (EDCs) in the environment. The YAES further showed variable anti-estrogenic activities in treated wastewater. The current study highlights a variety of factors that may affect bioassay outcomes and conclusions drawn from the results for risk decision-making. For example, mismatches were found between estrogenic and anti-estrogenic activity, which suggests a potential masking effect in WWTW effluents and highlights the complexity of environmental samples containing chemical mixtures having variable endocrine-disrupting modes of action. Although the recombinant yeast assay is not without its limitations to show endocrine-disrupting modulation in test water systems, it serves as a cost-effective tier-1 scoping assay for further risk characterisation and intervention. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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