Back to Search Start Over

Photodegradation, toxicity and density functional theory study of pharmaceutical metoclopramide and its photoproducts

Authors :
Marko Hanževački
Klaudija Ivanković
Kristina Tolić
Dario Dabić
Sandra Babić
Irena Škorić
Martina Biošić
Bojana Žegura
Source :
The Science of the total environment. 807(Pt 1)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Pharmaceuticals as ubiquitous organic pollutants in the aquatic environment represent substances whose knowledge of environmental fate is still limited. One such compound is metoclopramide, whose direct and indirect photolysis and toxicological assessment have been studied for the first time in this study. Experiments were performed under solar radiation, showing metoclopramide as a compound that can easily degrade in different water matrices. The effect of pH-values showed the faster degradation at pH = 7, while the highly alkaline conditions at pH = 11 slowed photolysis. The highest value of quantum yield of metoclopramide photodegradation (ϕ = 43.55·10−4) was obtained at pH = 7. Various organic and inorganic substances (NO3−, Fe(III), HA, Cl−, Br−, HCO3−, SO42−), commonly present in natural water, inhibited the degradation by absorbing light. In all experiments, kinetics followed pseudo-first-order reaction with r2 greater than 0.98. The structures of the photolytic degradation products were tentatively identified, and degradation photoproducts were proposed. The hydroxylation of the aromatic ring and the amino group's dealkylation were two major photoproduct formation mechanisms. Calculated thermochemical quantities are in agreement with the experimentally observed stability of different photoproducts. Reactive sites in metoclopramide were studied with conceptual density functional theory and regions most susceptible to •OH attack were characterized. Metoclopramide and its degradation products were neither genotoxic for bacteria Salmonella typhimurium in the SOS/umuC assay nor acutely toxic for bacteria Vibrio fischeri.

Details

ISSN :
18791026
Volume :
807
Issue :
Pt 1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Science of the total environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3c9166a5c2c53fd22ab7c495fd2939d8