4.7 Article

A whole-cell bioreporter assay for quantitative genotoxicity evaluation of environmental samples

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 184, Issue -, Pages 384-392

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2017.05.159

Keywords

Genotoxicity; Seawater; Soil; Simulation; SOS model; Whole-cell bioreporter

Funding

  1. Special Scientific Research Fund of Public Welfare of Environmental Protection (Ministry of Environmental Protection of China) [201309001]
  2. Ministry of Environmental Protection of China [201309001]
  3. National Research Council of Science and Technology Major Project on Water Pollution Control and Treatment [2015ZX07205003]
  4. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2012FY130300]

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Whole-cell bioreporters have emerged as promising tools for genotoxicity evaluation, due to their rapidity, cost-effectiveness, sensitivity and selectivity. In this study, a method for detecting genotoxicity in environmental samples was developed using the bioluminescent whole-cell bioreporter Escherichia coli recit:luxCDABE. To further test its performance in a real world scenario, the E. coli bioreporter was applied in two cases: i) soil samples collected from chromium(VI) contaminated sites; ii) crude oil contaminated seawater collected after the Jiaozhou Bay oil spill which occurred in 2013. The chromium(VI) contaminated soils were pretreated by water extraction, and directly exposed to the bioreporter in two phases: aqueous soil extraction (water phase) and soil supernatant (solid phase). The results indicated that both extractable and soil particle fixed chromium(VI) were bioavailable to the bioreporter, and the solid-phase contact bioreporter assay provided a more precise evaluation of soil genotoxicity. For crude oil contaminated seawater, the response of the bioreporter clearly illustrated the spatial and time change in genotoxicity surrounding the spill site, suggesting that the crude oil degradation process decreased the genotoxic risk to ecosystem. In addition, the performance of the bioreporter was simulated by a modified cross-regulation gene expression model, which quantitatively described the DNA damage response of the E. coli bioreporter. Accordingly, the bioluminescent response of the bioreporter was calculated as the mitomycin C equivalent, enabling quantitative comparison of genotoxicities between different environmental samples. This bioreporter assay provides a rapid and sensitive screening tool for direct genotoxicity assessment of environmental samples. (C) 2017 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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