Potential metabolism of pharmaceuticals in radish: Comparison of in vivo and in vitro exposure.

Environ Pollut

Department of Plant, Soil and Microbial Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA. Electronic address:

Published: November 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Pharmaceutical metabolism in plants affects vegetable safety and human health monitoring but is under-researched due to methodological limitations.
  • This study used radish as a model to analyze how different pharmaceuticals (like caffeine and oxytetracycline) are metabolized both in living plants and through isolated enzyme extracts.
  • Results showed significant differences in metabolism between plant parts, indicating the utility of plant enzyme extracts as a research tool for understanding pharmaceutical metabolism.

Article Abstract

Metabolism of pharmaceuticals in plants is important to evaluate their fate and accumulation in vegetables, and subsequently the risks to human health. However, limited knowledge is available to evaluate metabolism of pharmaceuticals in plants due to the lack of appropriate research approaches. In this study, radish was selected as a model plant to investigate metabolism of pharmaceuticals in intact plants (in vivo) growing in hydroponic solution and in plant tissue enzyme extracts (in vitro). For caffeine, six phase-I demethylation metabolites identified in the intact radish plant were also found in the plant enzyme extracts. After 7 days of in vivo exposure, the amount of the identified metabolites was about 5.4 times greater than the parent compound caffeine in radish roots. Furthermore, the metabolism potential of fifteen pharmaceuticals in radish was evaluated on the basis of mass balance. After 7 days of hydroponic exposure, oxytetracycline, trimethoprim, carbamazepine, lincomycin, monensin and tylosin manifested relatively less extent of metabolism with the mass recoveries ranging from 52.3 to 78.2%. In contrast, 17 β-estradiol, sulfamethoxazole, sulfadiazine, estrone, triclosan, acetaminophen, caffeine, carbadox and lamotrigine underwent extensive metabolism with only 3.0 to 32.1% of the parent compound recovered. In the in vitro system, 17 β-estradiol, estrone, triclosan, oxytetracycline, acetaminophen, sulfadiazine and sulfamethoxazole were readily metabolized in radish root enzyme extracts with 1.8 to 34.0% remaining after 96-h exposure. While in the leaf enzyme extracts, only triclosan was rapidly metabolized with 49.2% remaining, and others pharmaceuticals were ≥60%, indicating that the varying extents of metabolism occurred in different plant parts. This study highlights the importance of pharmaceutical metabolism in plants, and suggests that plant tissue enzyme extracts could serve as an alternative tool to assess pharmaceutical metabolism in plants.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2018.07.060DOI Listing

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