When adding sufficient chlorine to achieve breakpoint chlorination to source water containing high concentration of ammonia during drinking water treatment, high concentrations of disinfection by-products(DBPs) may ...When adding sufficient chlorine to achieve breakpoint chlorination to source water containing high concentration of ammonia during drinking water treatment, high concentrations of disinfection by-products(DBPs) may form. If N-nitrosamine precursors are present, highly toxic N-nitrosamines, primarily N-nitrosodimethylamine(NDMA), may also form. Removing their precursors before disinfection should be a more effective way to minimize these DBPs formation. In this study, zeolites and activated carbon were examined for ammonia and N-nitrosamine precursor removal when incorporated into drinking water treatment processes.The test results indicate that Mordenite zeolite can remove ammonia and five of seven N-nitrosamine precursors efficiently by single step adsorption test. The practical applicability was evaluated by simulation of typical drinking water treatment processes using six-gang stirring system. The Mordenite zeolite was applied at the steps of lime softening, alum coagulation, and alum coagulation with powdered activated carbon(PAC) sorption. While the lime softening process resulted in poor zeolite performance, alum coagulation did not impact ammonia and N-nitrosamine precursor removal. During alum coagulation, more than67% ammonia and 70%–100% N-nitrosamine precursors were removed by Mordenite zeolite(except 3-(dimethylaminomethyl)indole(DMAI) and 4-dimethylaminoantipyrine(DMAP)). PAC effectively removed DMAI and DMAP when added during alum coagulation. A combination of the zeolite and PAC selected efficiently removed ammonia and all tested seven N-nitrosamine precursors(dimethylamine(DMA), ethylmethylamine(EMA), diethylamine(DEA), dipropylamine(DPA), trimethylamine(TMA), DMAP, and DMAI) during the alum coagulation process.展开更多
Reactive nitrogen oxygen species(RNOS) implicate damage in biological systems,especially leading to inflammation,neurodegenerative and cardiovascular diseases,and cancer by altering the functions of biomolecules thr...Reactive nitrogen oxygen species(RNOS) implicate damage in biological systems,especially leading to inflammation,neurodegenerative and cardiovascular diseases,and cancer by altering the functions of biomolecules through the N-nitrosation and N-nitration reactions.The mechanisms of N-nitrosation and N-nitration reactions of ammonia and dimethylamine by RNOS,i.e.,N2O3,N2O4,N2O5 and ONOOH,were investigated at the CBS-QB3 level of theory.The computational results indicate that the N-nitrosation reaction prefers a concerted mechanism,in which a H-abstraction and ON-addition occur simultaneously,whereas a stepwise mechanism(also called a free radical mechanism) is more favorable for most nitrating agents in the N-nitration reaction,where NO2 first abstracts a hydrogen atom from the nitrogen of amines and then the induced intermediate reacts with NO2 once more to form the nitration products.However,the concerted pathway is still a feasible process for some nitrating agents such as N2O5.In addition,the relationship between the structures of different RNOS and their nitrosating or nitrating abilities was also investigated.展开更多
In the present study, we investigated the induction of apoptosis by N-nitrosopyrrolidine (NPYR) and N-nitrosodimethy-lamine (NDMA) in two human cell lines: HL-60 (leukemia) and HepG2 (hepatoma). Apoptotic cells were i...In the present study, we investigated the induction of apoptosis by N-nitrosopyrrolidine (NPYR) and N-nitrosodimethy-lamine (NDMA) in two human cell lines: HL-60 (leukemia) and HepG2 (hepatoma). Apoptotic cells were identified by: 1) chromatin condensation, 2) flow cytometry analysis and 3) poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage. Both cell lines exhibited morphological changes consistent with apoptotic events following treatment with N-nitrosamines. Flow cytometry analysis showed that both N-nitrosamines induced apoptotic cell death in a concentration and time dependent- manner. NPYR was stronger than NDMA, since it induced a significant apoptotic cell death after 72 h starting from a concentration of 10 mM, whereas NDMA was effective at 27 mM. Furthermore, NPYR and NDMA caused the cleavage of PARP in HL-60 cells whereas no PARP cleavage was detected in HepG2 cells. However, NPYR- and NDMA-induced cell death in HepG2 cells was prevented by specific caspase inhibitors. Caspase-8 mediated main pathway and was responsible for 76% (NPYR) and 64% (NDMA) inhibition of apoptosis. The data demonstrate that NPYR and NDMA induce apoptosis in HL-60 and HepG2 cell lines via caspase-dependent pathway.展开更多
基金supported by US EPA STAR program(No.83517301)Missouri Department of Natural Resourcesthe support from Chemistry Department,Environmental Research Center,and Center for Single Nanoparticle,Single Cell,and Single Molecule Monitoring(CS3M)at Missouri University of Science and Technology
文摘When adding sufficient chlorine to achieve breakpoint chlorination to source water containing high concentration of ammonia during drinking water treatment, high concentrations of disinfection by-products(DBPs) may form. If N-nitrosamine precursors are present, highly toxic N-nitrosamines, primarily N-nitrosodimethylamine(NDMA), may also form. Removing their precursors before disinfection should be a more effective way to minimize these DBPs formation. In this study, zeolites and activated carbon were examined for ammonia and N-nitrosamine precursor removal when incorporated into drinking water treatment processes.The test results indicate that Mordenite zeolite can remove ammonia and five of seven N-nitrosamine precursors efficiently by single step adsorption test. The practical applicability was evaluated by simulation of typical drinking water treatment processes using six-gang stirring system. The Mordenite zeolite was applied at the steps of lime softening, alum coagulation, and alum coagulation with powdered activated carbon(PAC) sorption. While the lime softening process resulted in poor zeolite performance, alum coagulation did not impact ammonia and N-nitrosamine precursor removal. During alum coagulation, more than67% ammonia and 70%–100% N-nitrosamine precursors were removed by Mordenite zeolite(except 3-(dimethylaminomethyl)indole(DMAI) and 4-dimethylaminoantipyrine(DMAP)). PAC effectively removed DMAI and DMAP when added during alum coagulation. A combination of the zeolite and PAC selected efficiently removed ammonia and all tested seven N-nitrosamine precursors(dimethylamine(DMA), ethylmethylamine(EMA), diethylamine(DEA), dipropylamine(DPA), trimethylamine(TMA), DMAP, and DMAI) during the alum coagulation process.
基金supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No 20672011)Beijing Natural Science Foundation (No 2092008)Beijing Nova Program (No 2008B09)
文摘Reactive nitrogen oxygen species(RNOS) implicate damage in biological systems,especially leading to inflammation,neurodegenerative and cardiovascular diseases,and cancer by altering the functions of biomolecules through the N-nitrosation and N-nitration reactions.The mechanisms of N-nitrosation and N-nitration reactions of ammonia and dimethylamine by RNOS,i.e.,N2O3,N2O4,N2O5 and ONOOH,were investigated at the CBS-QB3 level of theory.The computational results indicate that the N-nitrosation reaction prefers a concerted mechanism,in which a H-abstraction and ON-addition occur simultaneously,whereas a stepwise mechanism(also called a free radical mechanism) is more favorable for most nitrating agents in the N-nitration reaction,where NO2 first abstracts a hydrogen atom from the nitrogen of amines and then the induced intermediate reacts with NO2 once more to form the nitration products.However,the concerted pathway is still a feasible process for some nitrating agents such as N2O5.In addition,the relationship between the structures of different RNOS and their nitrosating or nitrating abilities was also investigated.
文摘In the present study, we investigated the induction of apoptosis by N-nitrosopyrrolidine (NPYR) and N-nitrosodimethy-lamine (NDMA) in two human cell lines: HL-60 (leukemia) and HepG2 (hepatoma). Apoptotic cells were identified by: 1) chromatin condensation, 2) flow cytometry analysis and 3) poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage. Both cell lines exhibited morphological changes consistent with apoptotic events following treatment with N-nitrosamines. Flow cytometry analysis showed that both N-nitrosamines induced apoptotic cell death in a concentration and time dependent- manner. NPYR was stronger than NDMA, since it induced a significant apoptotic cell death after 72 h starting from a concentration of 10 mM, whereas NDMA was effective at 27 mM. Furthermore, NPYR and NDMA caused the cleavage of PARP in HL-60 cells whereas no PARP cleavage was detected in HepG2 cells. However, NPYR- and NDMA-induced cell death in HepG2 cells was prevented by specific caspase inhibitors. Caspase-8 mediated main pathway and was responsible for 76% (NPYR) and 64% (NDMA) inhibition of apoptosis. The data demonstrate that NPYR and NDMA induce apoptosis in HL-60 and HepG2 cell lines via caspase-dependent pathway.