8 results match your criteria: "Institute for Food Chemistry and Food Biotechnology[Affiliation]"

Biotransformation of Tetracyclines by Fungi: Challenges and Future Research Perspectives.

J Agric Food Chem

February 2022

Institute for Food Chemistry and Food Biotechnology, Justus Liebig University, Heinrich-Buff-Ring 17, D-35392 Giessen, Germany.

Tetracycline antibiotics are used worldwide in human and veterinary medicine. On the basis of low metabolization and through organic fertilizers, tetracyclines enter the environment in a biologically active form. This can have toxic effects on microbial communities and promote the selection of resistant strains.

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Antibiotics can be detected in manure and digestate samples worldwide. As manure is a frequently used fertilizer, antibiotics are found in soil and leachate samples. Only little is known about the long-term fate of antibiotics in the soil environment.

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Tetracyclines belong to the group of the most applied antibiotics in veterinary medicine worldwide. Due to their incomplete absorption and/or metabolism in the animal gut, tetracyclines are frequently detected in manure samples. Within the matrix, an elimination of these compounds has been reported in several studies.

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Background: Different setups and protocols have been developed for investigating insecticide effects on Anopheles (An.) mosquitoes, vectors of malaria. However, chemical uptake resulting from their tarsal contact with insecticide-treated material has seldom been investigated.

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Veterinary antibiotics such as sulfonamides are frequently applied in livestock farming worldwide. Due to poor absorption in the animal gut and/or reversible metabolization sulfonamides are excreted in considerable amounts and can subsequently be detected in liquid manure. As manure is utilized for soil fertilization, sulfonamides can enter the environment via this pathway.

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Antibiotics such as sulfonamides and tetracyclines are frequently used in veterinary medicine. Due to incomplete absorption in the animal gut and/or unmetabolized excretion, the substances can enter the environment by using manure as soil fertilizer. The anaerobic fermentation process of biogas plants is discussed as potential sink for antibiotic compounds.

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Selection of organic process and source indicator substances for the anthropogenically influenced water cycle.

Chemosphere

April 2015

Centre for Water in Urban Areas, Technische Universität Berlin, Sekr. KF4, Straße des 17. Juni 135, 10623 Berlin, Germany. Electronic address:

An increasing number of organic micropollutants (OMP) is detected in anthropogenically influenced water cycles. Source control and effective natural and technical barriers are essential to maintain a high quality of drinking water resources under these circumstances. Based on the literature and our own research this study proposes a limited number of OMP that can serve as indicator substances for the major sources of OMP, such as wastewater treatment plants, agriculture and surface runoff.

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A new method for the analysis of sulfonamides and tetracyclines in heterogenic biogas plant input samples and fermentation residues is introduced. Veterinary antibiotics are only partially absorbed in the animal gut; therefore, animal manure can contain high loads of these substances. Animal manure is used for biogas generation, so antibiotics can enter the anaerobic fermentation process this way.

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