Understanding Sources of Perfluorinated Acids to Biological Systems

The overall aim of this thesis was to investigate the fate of perfluorinated alkyl compounds (PFCs) in biological systems. During the past several years, it has been shown that wildlife are ubiquitously contaminated with two classes of PFCs, the perfluoroalkyl carboxylates (CxF2x+1C(O)OH, PFCAs) an...

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Main Author: Butt, Craig
Other Authors: Mabury, Scott A.
Language:en_ca
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/29964
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-299632014-01-29T03:29:28ZUnderstanding Sources of Perfluorinated Acids to Biological SystemsButt, Craigperfluorinated acidsbiotransformationatmospheric oxidationtemporal and spatial trends0484The overall aim of this thesis was to investigate the fate of perfluorinated alkyl compounds (PFCs) in biological systems. During the past several years, it has been shown that wildlife are ubiquitously contaminated with two classes of PFCs, the perfluoroalkyl carboxylates (CxF2x+1C(O)OH, PFCAs) and sulfonates (CxF2x+1SO3H, PFSAs). However, there is still considerable uncertainty regarding how wildlife are accumulating these PFCs, particularly in remote areas such as the Canadian arctic. The potential for fluorotelomer acrylate monomers (CxF2x+1CH2CH2OC(O)CH=CH2, FTAcs) to act as precursors to PFCAs through atmospheric oxidation was investigated using smog chamber experiments. FTAc atmospheric fate is determined by OH radical reaction with a lifetime of approximately 1 day. The sole primary product of this reaction was the 4:2 fluorotelomer glyoxylate which is expected to undergo further atmospheric oxidation or photolysis to ultimately yield PFCAs. Temporal and spatial trends of PFCs in arctic ringed seals and seabirds were investigated to assist in understanding PFC transport mechanisms to remote regions. In ringed seals, perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) levels decreased rapidly, coinciding with the phase out by the major manufacturer. These findings are consistent with volatile precursors as the dominant source of PFCs to arctic wildlife. The bioaccumulation and biotransformation of the 8:2 FTAc was investigated in two complimentary studies with rainbow trout. During the in vivo dietary exposure study, fish rapidly accumulated and biotransformed the 8:2 FTAc, with intermediate metabolites observed within 1 hour of dosing. Perfluorooctanoate (PFOA), perfluorononanoate (PFNA) and perfluoroheptanoate (PFHpA) were formed and accumulated in low yields. The carboxylesterase activity in the trout liver and stomach was investigated using in vivo sub-cellular (S9) incubations. Very high esterase activities were shown with approximately equal efficiency in the stomach and liver. The metabolic pathway of the 8:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (8:2 FTOH) was investigated by separately dosing whole rainbow trout with three intermediate metabolites that represented important branching points. The 7:3 fluorotelomer saturated carboxylate (FTCA) did not form PFOA, but formed PFHpA and the 7:3 fluorotelomer unsaturated carboxylate (FTUCA). The 8:2 FTCA and 8:2 FTUCA did form PFOA, confirming a “beta-like-oxidation” mechanism.Mabury, Scott A.2010-062011-09-15T20:03:39ZWITHHELD_ONE_YEAR2011-09-15T20:03:39Z2011-09-15Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/29964en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic perfluorinated acids
biotransformation
atmospheric oxidation
temporal and spatial trends
0484
spellingShingle perfluorinated acids
biotransformation
atmospheric oxidation
temporal and spatial trends
0484
Butt, Craig
Understanding Sources of Perfluorinated Acids to Biological Systems
description The overall aim of this thesis was to investigate the fate of perfluorinated alkyl compounds (PFCs) in biological systems. During the past several years, it has been shown that wildlife are ubiquitously contaminated with two classes of PFCs, the perfluoroalkyl carboxylates (CxF2x+1C(O)OH, PFCAs) and sulfonates (CxF2x+1SO3H, PFSAs). However, there is still considerable uncertainty regarding how wildlife are accumulating these PFCs, particularly in remote areas such as the Canadian arctic. The potential for fluorotelomer acrylate monomers (CxF2x+1CH2CH2OC(O)CH=CH2, FTAcs) to act as precursors to PFCAs through atmospheric oxidation was investigated using smog chamber experiments. FTAc atmospheric fate is determined by OH radical reaction with a lifetime of approximately 1 day. The sole primary product of this reaction was the 4:2 fluorotelomer glyoxylate which is expected to undergo further atmospheric oxidation or photolysis to ultimately yield PFCAs. Temporal and spatial trends of PFCs in arctic ringed seals and seabirds were investigated to assist in understanding PFC transport mechanisms to remote regions. In ringed seals, perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) levels decreased rapidly, coinciding with the phase out by the major manufacturer. These findings are consistent with volatile precursors as the dominant source of PFCs to arctic wildlife. The bioaccumulation and biotransformation of the 8:2 FTAc was investigated in two complimentary studies with rainbow trout. During the in vivo dietary exposure study, fish rapidly accumulated and biotransformed the 8:2 FTAc, with intermediate metabolites observed within 1 hour of dosing. Perfluorooctanoate (PFOA), perfluorononanoate (PFNA) and perfluoroheptanoate (PFHpA) were formed and accumulated in low yields. The carboxylesterase activity in the trout liver and stomach was investigated using in vivo sub-cellular (S9) incubations. Very high esterase activities were shown with approximately equal efficiency in the stomach and liver. The metabolic pathway of the 8:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (8:2 FTOH) was investigated by separately dosing whole rainbow trout with three intermediate metabolites that represented important branching points. The 7:3 fluorotelomer saturated carboxylate (FTCA) did not form PFOA, but formed PFHpA and the 7:3 fluorotelomer unsaturated carboxylate (FTUCA). The 8:2 FTCA and 8:2 FTUCA did form PFOA, confirming a “beta-like-oxidation” mechanism.
author2 Mabury, Scott A.
author_facet Mabury, Scott A.
Butt, Craig
author Butt, Craig
author_sort Butt, Craig
title Understanding Sources of Perfluorinated Acids to Biological Systems
title_short Understanding Sources of Perfluorinated Acids to Biological Systems
title_full Understanding Sources of Perfluorinated Acids to Biological Systems
title_fullStr Understanding Sources of Perfluorinated Acids to Biological Systems
title_full_unstemmed Understanding Sources of Perfluorinated Acids to Biological Systems
title_sort understanding sources of perfluorinated acids to biological systems
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/29964
work_keys_str_mv AT buttcraig understandingsourcesofperfluorinatedacidstobiologicalsystems
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