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Photochemical properties and toxicity of fluoroquinolone antibiotics impacted by complexation with metal ions in different pH solutions

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Photochemical properties and toxicity of fluoroquinolone antibiotics impacted by complexation with metal ions in different pH solutions. / Cao, Shengkai; Zhang, Peng; Song, Heming et al.
In: Journal of Environmental Sciences, Vol. 150, 30.04.2025, p. 149-158.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Cao S, Zhang P, Song H, Ge L, Niu J. Photochemical properties and toxicity of fluoroquinolone antibiotics impacted by complexation with metal ions in different pH solutions. Journal of Environmental Sciences. 2025 Apr 30;150:149-158. Epub 2024 Mar 28. doi: 10.1016/j.jes.2024.03.019

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Cao, Shengkai ; Zhang, Peng ; Song, Heming et al. / Photochemical properties and toxicity of fluoroquinolone antibiotics impacted by complexation with metal ions in different pH solutions. In: Journal of Environmental Sciences. 2025 ; Vol. 150. pp. 149-158.

Bibtex

@article{4b9c30e8cc844578ba2e87a0904b60fc,
title = "Photochemical properties and toxicity of fluoroquinolone antibiotics impacted by complexation with metal ions in different pH solutions",
abstract = "Acid-base dissociable antibiotic-metal complexes are known to be emerging contaminants in the aquatic environments. However, little information is available on the photochemical properties and toxicity of these complex forms. This study investigated the spectral properties of three fluoroquinolones (FQs) with and without metal ions Fe(III), Cu(II), and Al(III) in solutions under different pH conditions, as well as evaluated the changes in toxicity due to the complex with these metal ions using luminescent bacteria (vibrio fischeri). FQs showed a higher tendency to coordinate metal ions under alkaline conditions compared to neutral and acidic conditions, and the formation of complexes weakened the ultraviolet-absorbing ability of FQs. At pH = 7.0, Cu(II) quenched the fluorescence intensity of FQs. Moreover, their Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy were explored, revealing that the coordination sites of Cu(II) in three FQs were situated in a bidentate manner through the oxygen atom of the deprotonated carboxyl group and cyclic carbonyl oxygen atom. This conclusion was further verified by the theory of molecular surface electrostatic potential. In addition, except for complexes of ciprofloxacin-metals, enhanced toxicity of FQs upon coordination with Fe(III) was observed, while reduced toxicity was found for coordination with Cu(II) and Al(III). These results are important for accurately evaluating the photochemical behavior and risk of these antibiotics in aquatic environments contaminated with metal ions.",
author = "Shengkai Cao and Peng Zhang and Heming Song and Linke Ge and Junfeng Niu",
year = "2025",
month = apr,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1016/j.jes.2024.03.019",
language = "English",
volume = "150",
pages = "149--158",
journal = "Journal of Environmental Sciences",
issn = "1001-0742",
publisher = "Chinese Academy of Sciences",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Photochemical properties and toxicity of fluoroquinolone antibiotics impacted by complexation with metal ions in different pH solutions

AU - Cao, Shengkai

AU - Zhang, Peng

AU - Song, Heming

AU - Ge, Linke

AU - Niu, Junfeng

PY - 2025/4/30

Y1 - 2025/4/30

N2 - Acid-base dissociable antibiotic-metal complexes are known to be emerging contaminants in the aquatic environments. However, little information is available on the photochemical properties and toxicity of these complex forms. This study investigated the spectral properties of three fluoroquinolones (FQs) with and without metal ions Fe(III), Cu(II), and Al(III) in solutions under different pH conditions, as well as evaluated the changes in toxicity due to the complex with these metal ions using luminescent bacteria (vibrio fischeri). FQs showed a higher tendency to coordinate metal ions under alkaline conditions compared to neutral and acidic conditions, and the formation of complexes weakened the ultraviolet-absorbing ability of FQs. At pH = 7.0, Cu(II) quenched the fluorescence intensity of FQs. Moreover, their Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy were explored, revealing that the coordination sites of Cu(II) in three FQs were situated in a bidentate manner through the oxygen atom of the deprotonated carboxyl group and cyclic carbonyl oxygen atom. This conclusion was further verified by the theory of molecular surface electrostatic potential. In addition, except for complexes of ciprofloxacin-metals, enhanced toxicity of FQs upon coordination with Fe(III) was observed, while reduced toxicity was found for coordination with Cu(II) and Al(III). These results are important for accurately evaluating the photochemical behavior and risk of these antibiotics in aquatic environments contaminated with metal ions.

AB - Acid-base dissociable antibiotic-metal complexes are known to be emerging contaminants in the aquatic environments. However, little information is available on the photochemical properties and toxicity of these complex forms. This study investigated the spectral properties of three fluoroquinolones (FQs) with and without metal ions Fe(III), Cu(II), and Al(III) in solutions under different pH conditions, as well as evaluated the changes in toxicity due to the complex with these metal ions using luminescent bacteria (vibrio fischeri). FQs showed a higher tendency to coordinate metal ions under alkaline conditions compared to neutral and acidic conditions, and the formation of complexes weakened the ultraviolet-absorbing ability of FQs. At pH = 7.0, Cu(II) quenched the fluorescence intensity of FQs. Moreover, their Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy were explored, revealing that the coordination sites of Cu(II) in three FQs were situated in a bidentate manner through the oxygen atom of the deprotonated carboxyl group and cyclic carbonyl oxygen atom. This conclusion was further verified by the theory of molecular surface electrostatic potential. In addition, except for complexes of ciprofloxacin-metals, enhanced toxicity of FQs upon coordination with Fe(III) was observed, while reduced toxicity was found for coordination with Cu(II) and Al(III). These results are important for accurately evaluating the photochemical behavior and risk of these antibiotics in aquatic environments contaminated with metal ions.

U2 - 10.1016/j.jes.2024.03.019

DO - 10.1016/j.jes.2024.03.019

M3 - Journal article

VL - 150

SP - 149

EP - 158

JO - Journal of Environmental Sciences

JF - Journal of Environmental Sciences

SN - 1001-0742

ER -