Chloroethylene oxide and 2-chloroacetaldehyde, two metabolites of vinyl chloride, and 2-chloroethanol, a putative metabolic intermediate, were assayed for their genetic activity in the yeasts Schizosaccharomyces pombe and Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Chloroethylene oxide was found to be the most effective in inducing forward mutations in Sch. pombe and gene conversions in S. cerevisiae, increasing the mutation and conversion frequencies 340 and 50 times, respectively, over those of the controls. In either the presence or the absence of mouse liver microsomes, 2-chloroacetaldehyde showed only feeble genetic activity, and 2-chloroethanol was completely inactive in both yeast strains. In contrast to vinyl chloride, 2-chloroacetaldehyde did not induce forward mutations in Sch. pombe inthe host-mediated assay in mice. The results strongly support the hypothesis that chloroethylene oxide is one of the principal mutagenic agents formed from vinyl chloride in the presence of mouse liver enzymes.
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ACS Appl Mater Interfaces
January 2025
Department of Environmental Engineering, Seoul National University of Science and Technology, Seoul 01811, Republic of Korea.
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School of Resource and Environmental Engineering, Inner Mongolia University of Technology, Hohhot 010051, China.
The rapid development of the global chemical industry has led to widespread groundwater contamination, with frequent pollution incidents posing severe threats to water safety. However, there has been insufficient assessment of the health risks posed by chlorinated hydrocarbon contamination in groundwater around chemical industrial parks. This study evaluates the chlorinated hydrocarbon contamination in groundwater at a chemical park and conducts a multi-pathway health risk assessment, identifying the key risk pollutants.
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Faculty of Geosciences, University of Bremen, Klagenfurter Straße 2-4, Bremen 28359, Germany.
Chloroethenes (CHCl with = 1, 2, 3, 4) are produced and consumed in various industrial processes. As the release of these compounds into air, water, and soils can pose significant risks to human health and the environment, different techniques have been exploited to prevent or remediate chloroethene pollution. Although several previous experimental and computational studies investigated the removal of chloroethenes using zeolite adsorbents, their structural diversity in terms of pore size and pore topology has hardly been explored so far.
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State Key Laboratory of Green Chemical Engineering and Industrial Catalysis, Research Institute of Industrial Catalysis, School of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai 200237, PR China.
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School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Queen's University, David Keir Building, Stranmillis Road, BT9 5AG Belfast, Northern Ireland, U.K.
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