Insight into the enhancement effect of humic acid on microbial degradation of triclosan in anaerobic sediments

Humic acid (HA) as one class of macromolecular substances plays important roles in mediating environmental behaviors of pollutants in sediments, but its effect on microbial degradation of triclosan (TCS), a common antibacterial drug, remains unclear. In this study, the effects of HA addition with di...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hazardous materials 2024-01, Vol.461, p.132549-132549, Article 132549
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Juan, Zhang, Bo, Wang, Chao, Wang, Peifang, Cui, Ge, Gao, Han, Feng, Bingbing, Zhang, Jingjing
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Humic acid (HA) as one class of macromolecular substances plays important roles in mediating environmental behaviors of pollutants in sediments, but its effect on microbial degradation of triclosan (TCS), a common antibacterial drug, remains unclear. In this study, the effects of HA addition with different dosages (0–5%) on TCS degradation in anaerobic sediment slurries and the underlying microbial mechanisms were investigated. The results showed that HA addition significantly accelerated the TCS removal and the maximum removal percentage (30.2%) was observed in the sediment slurry with 5% HA addition. The iron reduction rate, relative abundances of the genera Comamonas, Pseudomonas and Geobacter, and bacterial network complexity in sediment slurry were significantly enhanced due to HA addition. Based on the partial least squares path modeling analysis, the enhancement effect of HA on TCS degradation was mainly explained by Fe(II):Fe(III) ratio with the highest influence on TCS removal (total effect: 0.723), followed by dominant genera abundances (total effect: 0.391), module relative abundance (total effect: 0.272), and network topological features (total effect: 0.263). This finding enhanced our understanding of the role of HA in TCS biodegradation in contaminated sediments for bioremediation purposes. [Display omitted] •Humic acid enhanced anaerobic degradation of triclosan in sediment.•Humic acid promoted sediment Fe(III) reduction rate.•Anaerobic degradation of triclosan could be accelerated by Fe(III) reduction.•Humic acid increased bacterial network complexity to promote triclosan degradation.
ISSN:0304-3894
1873-3336
DOI:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2023.132549