4.2 Article

Methodological Advances to Study Contaminant Biotransformation: New Prospects for Understanding and Reducing Environmental Persistence?

Journal

ACS ES&T WATER
Volume 1, Issue 7, Pages 1541-1554

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsestwater.1c00025

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [616644, 614768, 616861]
  2. European Research Council (ERC) [616644, 614768] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Complex microbial communities in environmental systems play a crucial role in detoxifying chemical contaminants by transforming them into less harmful forms, but understanding of biotransformation processes for emerging contaminants at low concentrations is still limited. Advanced approaches to reducing environmental exposure to contaminants will rely on understanding the links between contaminant removal, key driving agents of biotransformation at low concentrations, and environmental conditions affecting microbial presence and activity.
Complex microbial communities in environmental systems play a key role in the detoxification of chemical contaminants by transforming them into less active metabolites or by complete mineralization. Biotransformation, i.e., transformation by microbes, is well understood for a number of priority pollutants, but a similar level of understanding is lacking for many emerging contaminants encountered at low concentrations and in complex mixtures across natural and engineered systems. Any advanced approaches aiming to reduce environmental exposure to such contaminants (e.g., novel engineered biological water treatment systems, design of readily degradable chemicals, or improved regulatory assessment strategies to determine contaminant persistence a priori) will depend on understanding the causal links among contaminant removal, the key driving agents of biotransformation at low concentrations (i.e., relevant microbes and their metabolic activities), and how their presence and activity depend on environmental conditions. In this Perspective, we present the current understanding and recent methodological advances that can help to identify such links, even in complex environmental microbiomes and for contaminants present at low concentrations in complex chemical mixtures. We discuss the ensuing insights into contaminant biotransformation across varying environments and conditions and ask how much closer we have come to designing improved approaches to reducing environmental exposure to contaminants.

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