Wastewater reuse and pharmaceutical pollution in agriculture: Uptake, transport, accumulation and metabolism of pharmaceutical pollutants within plants

The presence of pharmaceutical pollutants in water sources has become a growing concern due to its potential impacts on human health and other organisms. The physicochemical properties of pharmaceuticals based on their intended therapeutical application, which include antibiotics, hormones, analgesi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemosphere (Oxford) 2024-09, Vol.364, p.143055, Article 143055
Hauptverfasser: Mosharaf, Md Khaled, Gomes, Rachel L., Cook, Sarah, Alam, Mohammed S., Rasmusssen, Amanda
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The presence of pharmaceutical pollutants in water sources has become a growing concern due to its potential impacts on human health and other organisms. The physicochemical properties of pharmaceuticals based on their intended therapeutical application, which include antibiotics, hormones, analgesics, and antidepressants, is quite diverse. Their presence in wastewater, sewerage water, surface water, ground water and even in drinking water is reported by many researchers throughout the world. Human exposure to these pollutants through drinking water or consumption of aquatic and terrestrial organisms has raised concerns about potential adverse effects, such as endocrine disruption, antibiotic resistance, and developmental abnormalities. Once in the environment, they can persist, undergo transformation, or degrade, leading to a complex mixture of contaminants. Application of treated wastewater, compost, manures or biosolids in agricultural fields introduce pharmaceutical pollutants in the environment. As pharmaceuticals are diverse in nature, significant differences are observed during their uptake and accumulation in plants. While there have been extensive studies on aquatic ecosystems, the effect on agricultural land is more disparate. As of now, there are few reports available on the potential of plant uptake and transportation of pharmaceuticals within and between plant organs. This review summarizes the occurrence of pharmaceuticals in aquatic water bodies at a range of concentrations and their uptake, accumulation, and transport within plant tissues. Research gaps on pharmaceutical pollutants' specific effect on plant growth and future research scopes are highlighted. The factors affecting uptake of pharmaceuticals including hydrophobicity, ionization, physicochemical properties (pKa, logKow, pH, Henry's law constant) are discussed. Finally, metabolism of pharmaceuticals within plant cells through metabolism phase enzymes and plant responses to pharmaceuticals are reviewed. [Display omitted] •Use of reclaimed water or livestock waste in agriculture introduces pharmaceuticals to the land surface.•Uptake of pharmaceuticals in plants primarily depends on the physicochemical properties.•Aquaporin and anion channels participate in the uptake of pharmaceuticals.•Plants utilize numerous phase I and phase II enzymes to metabolize pharmaceuticals.•Exposure to pharmaceuticals interrupt major physiological processes in plants.
ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.143055