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Effects of Standard Humic Materials on Relative Bioavailability of NDL-PCBs in Juvenile Swine

Young children with their hand-to-mouth activity may be exposed to contaminated soils. However few studies assessing exposure of organic compounds sequestrated in soil were realized. The present study explores the impact of different organic matters on retention of NDL-PCBs during digestive processe...

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Autores principales: Delannoy, Matthieu, Schwarz, Jessica, Fournier, Agnès, Rychen, Guido, Feidt, Cyril
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4280112/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25549096
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0115759
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author Delannoy, Matthieu
Schwarz, Jessica
Fournier, Agnès
Rychen, Guido
Feidt, Cyril
author_facet Delannoy, Matthieu
Schwarz, Jessica
Fournier, Agnès
Rychen, Guido
Feidt, Cyril
author_sort Delannoy, Matthieu
collection PubMed
description Young children with their hand-to-mouth activity may be exposed to contaminated soils. However few studies assessing exposure of organic compounds sequestrated in soil were realized. The present study explores the impact of different organic matters on retention of NDL-PCBs during digestive processes using commercial humic substances in a close digestive model of children: the piglet. Six artificial soils were used. One standard soil, devoid of organic matter, and five amended versions of this standard soil with either fulvic acid, humic acid, Sphagnum peat, activated carbon or a mix of Sphagnum peat and activated carbon (95∶5) (SPAC) were prepared. In order to compare the different treatments, we use spiked oil and negative control animals. Forty male piglets were randomly distributed in 7 contaminated and one control groups (n  = 5 for each group). During 10 days, the piglets were fed artificial soil or a corn oil spiked with 19 200 ng of Aroclor 1254 per g of dry matter (6 000 ng.g(−1) of NDL-PCBs) to achieve an exposure dose of 1 200 ng NDL-PCBs.Kg(−1) of body weight per day. NDL-PCBs in adipose tissue were analyzed by GC-MS. Fulvic acid reduced slightly the bioavailability of NDL-PCBs compared to oil. Humic acid and Sphagnum peat reduced it significantly higher whereas activated carbon reduced the most. Piglets exposed to soil containing both activated carbon and Shagnum peat exhibited a lower reduction than soil with only activated carbon. Therefore, treatment groups are ordered by decreasing value of relative bioavailability as following: oil ≥ fulvic acid>Sphagnum peat ≥ Sphagnum peat and activated carbon ≥ Humic acid>>activated carbon. This suggests competition between Sphagnum peat and activated carbon. The present study highlights that quality of organic matter does have a significant effect on bioavailability of sequestrated organic compounds.
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spelling pubmed-42801122015-01-07 Effects of Standard Humic Materials on Relative Bioavailability of NDL-PCBs in Juvenile Swine Delannoy, Matthieu Schwarz, Jessica Fournier, Agnès Rychen, Guido Feidt, Cyril PLoS One Research Article Young children with their hand-to-mouth activity may be exposed to contaminated soils. However few studies assessing exposure of organic compounds sequestrated in soil were realized. The present study explores the impact of different organic matters on retention of NDL-PCBs during digestive processes using commercial humic substances in a close digestive model of children: the piglet. Six artificial soils were used. One standard soil, devoid of organic matter, and five amended versions of this standard soil with either fulvic acid, humic acid, Sphagnum peat, activated carbon or a mix of Sphagnum peat and activated carbon (95∶5) (SPAC) were prepared. In order to compare the different treatments, we use spiked oil and negative control animals. Forty male piglets were randomly distributed in 7 contaminated and one control groups (n  = 5 for each group). During 10 days, the piglets were fed artificial soil or a corn oil spiked with 19 200 ng of Aroclor 1254 per g of dry matter (6 000 ng.g(−1) of NDL-PCBs) to achieve an exposure dose of 1 200 ng NDL-PCBs.Kg(−1) of body weight per day. NDL-PCBs in adipose tissue were analyzed by GC-MS. Fulvic acid reduced slightly the bioavailability of NDL-PCBs compared to oil. Humic acid and Sphagnum peat reduced it significantly higher whereas activated carbon reduced the most. Piglets exposed to soil containing both activated carbon and Shagnum peat exhibited a lower reduction than soil with only activated carbon. Therefore, treatment groups are ordered by decreasing value of relative bioavailability as following: oil ≥ fulvic acid>Sphagnum peat ≥ Sphagnum peat and activated carbon ≥ Humic acid>>activated carbon. This suggests competition between Sphagnum peat and activated carbon. The present study highlights that quality of organic matter does have a significant effect on bioavailability of sequestrated organic compounds. Public Library of Science 2014-12-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4280112/ /pubmed/25549096 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0115759 Text en © 2014 Delannoy et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Delannoy, Matthieu
Schwarz, Jessica
Fournier, Agnès
Rychen, Guido
Feidt, Cyril
Effects of Standard Humic Materials on Relative Bioavailability of NDL-PCBs in Juvenile Swine
title Effects of Standard Humic Materials on Relative Bioavailability of NDL-PCBs in Juvenile Swine
title_full Effects of Standard Humic Materials on Relative Bioavailability of NDL-PCBs in Juvenile Swine
title_fullStr Effects of Standard Humic Materials on Relative Bioavailability of NDL-PCBs in Juvenile Swine
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Standard Humic Materials on Relative Bioavailability of NDL-PCBs in Juvenile Swine
title_short Effects of Standard Humic Materials on Relative Bioavailability of NDL-PCBs in Juvenile Swine
title_sort effects of standard humic materials on relative bioavailability of ndl-pcbs in juvenile swine
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4280112/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25549096
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0115759
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