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The Impact of Bisphenol A on the Anaerobic Sulfur Transformation: Promoting Sulfur Flow and Toxic H2S Production

Environmental Science & Technology 2024 23 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Qizi Fu, Chenxi Li, Zirui Liu, Xingyu Ma, Yunhao Xu, Yan Wang, Xuran Liu, Dongbo Wang

Summary

Researchers discovered that bisphenol A, a chemical commonly released from microplastics, promotes the production of toxic hydrogen sulfide gas in anaerobic wastewater environments. At environmentally relevant concentrations, the chemical increased hydrogen sulfide output by 14 to 32% by enhancing the activity of sulfur-cycling microorganisms. The findings suggest that microplastic-derived chemicals could worsen odor and corrosion problems in sewers and wastewater treatment facilities.

Study Type Environmental

Bisphenol A (BPA), as a typical leachable additive from microplastics and one of the most productive bulk chemicals, is widely distributed in sediments, sewers, and wastewater treatment plants, where active sulfur cycling takes place. However, the effect of BPA on sulfur transformation, particularly toxic H2S production, has been previously overlooked. This work found that BPA at environmentally relevant levels (i.e., 50-200 mg/kg total suspended solids, TSS) promoted the release of soluble sulfur compounds and increased H2S gas production by 14.3-31.9%. The tryptophan-like proteins of microbe extracellular polymeric substances (EPSs) can spontaneously adsorb BPA, which is an enthalpy-driven reaction (ΔH = -513.5 kJ mol-1, ΔS = -1.60 kJ mol-1K -1, and ΔG = -19.52 kJ mol-1 at 35 °C). This binding changed the composition and structure of EPSs, which improved the direct electron transfer capacity of EPSs, thereby promoting the bioprocesses of organic sulfur hydrolysis and sulfate reduction. In addition, BPA presence enriched the functional microbes (e.g., Desulfovibrio and Desulfuromonas) responsible for organic sulfur mineralization and inorganic sulfate reduction and increased the abundance of related genes involved in ATP-binding cassette transporters and sulfur metabolism (e.g., Sat and AspB), which promoted anaerobic sulfur transformation. This work deepens our understanding of the interaction between BPA and sulfur transformation occurring in anaerobic environments.

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