Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Sep 2024)

Cell-free hemoglobin and hemin catalyzing triclosan oxidative coupling in plasma: A novel exogenous phenolic pollutants coupling pathway

  • Mengtao Zhang,
  • Xiaoyan Li,
  • Lin Lin,
  • Jianghong Shi,
  • Hemi Luan,
  • Bing Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 282
p. 116708

Abstract

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Previous studies reported that hemoprotein CYP450 catalyzed triclosan coupling is an “uncommon” metabolic pathway that may enhance toxicity, raising concerns about its environmental and health impacts. Hemoglobin, a notable hemoprotein, can catalyze endogenous phenolic amino acid tyrosine coupling reactions. Our study explored the feasibility of these coupling reactions for exogenous phenolic pollutants in plasma. Both hemoglobin and hemin were found to catalyze triclosan coupling in the presence of H₂O₂. This resulted in the formation of five diTCS-2 H, two diTCS-Cl-3 H, and twelve triTCS-4 H in phosphate buffer, with a total of nineteen triclosan coupling products monitored using LC-QTOF. In plasma, five diTCS-2 H, two diTCS-Cl-3 H, and two triTCS-4 H were detected in hemoglobin-catalyzed reactions. Hemin showed a weaker catalytic effect on triclosan transformation compared to hemoglobin, likely due to hemin dimerization and oxidative degradation by H₂O₂, which limits its catalytic efficiency. Triclosan transformation in the human plasma-like medium still occurs with high H₂O₂, despite the presence of antioxidant proteins that typically inhibit such transformations. In plasma, free H₂O₂ was depleted within 40 minutes when 800 µM H₂O₂ was added, suggesting a rapid consumption of H₂O₂ in these reactions. Antioxidative species, or hemoglobin/hemin scavengers such as bovine serum albumin, may inhibit but not completely terminate the triclosan coupling reactions. Previous studies reported that diTCS-2 H showed higher hydrophobicity and greater endocrine-disrupting effects compared to triclosan, which further underscores the potential health risks. This study indicates that hemoglobin and heme in human plasma might significantly contribute to phenolic coupling reactions, potentially increasing health risks.

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