Abstract

Pesticide adjuvants (PAs) denote the general term for auxiliaries in pesticide preparations except for the active components. Toluene, chloroform, and trichloroethylene are the three most commonly used PAs as organic solvents. The residues of the three chemicals in the process of production and application of pesticides may endanger the ecosystem. In the present study, the mutagenicity of toluene, chloroform, and trichloroethylene as well the mixture of the three chemicals was tested by the Salmonella typhimurium reverse mutation test (Ames test) with TA97, TA98, TA100, and TA102 strains in the system with and without rat liver microsomal preparations (S9). The four tester strains have been used for more than 40 years to detect mutagenic compounds in chemicals, cosmetics, and environmental samples. The mutagenicity was detected on tester strains in the separated experiment from the three chemicals. The addition of S9 decreased the mutation ratios of toluene to four strains, except for the TA100 strain, but increased the mutation ratios of chloroform to four strains except for the TA98 strain. Trichloroethylene caused positive mutagenicity to become negative on the TA102 strain. In the mixed experiment, positive effects were detected only on the TA102 strain in the absence of S9. The addition of S9 increased the mutagenicity except for the TA102 strain. The mixture of toluene, chloroform, and trichloroethylene showed antagonism in mutagenicity to tester strains, except for the TA102 strain without S9. However, the mixture showed a synergistic effect to tester strains after adding S9 except for the TA98 strain.

Highlights

  • Pesticide adjuvants (PAs) are all auxiliaries in pesticide formulation except for the active components [1]

  • Chloroform caused positive mutagenicity to the TA98 and TA100 strains without S9

  • Considering the results, toluene caused mutagenicity on TA97, TA98, and TA102 strains, chloroform caused mutagenicity on TA98 and TA100 strains, and trichloroethylene caused mutagenicity on all four tester strains without S9

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Summary

Introduction

Pesticide adjuvants (PAs) are all auxiliaries in pesticide formulation except for the active components [1]. The addition of PAs can increase the biological activity of the active ingredients or make the formulation chemically more stable [2]. The content of PAs in pesticides is up to 99.9% [3]. Most PAs are accompanied by spraying into the soil and are subsequently washed directly into the water body [4]. Some highly volatile PAs directly volatilize into the air, resulting in organic pollutants in the atmosphere [5,6]. Studies have shown that more than 80% of PAs residues remain in the soil, water, and atmosphere environmental media during pesticide application [7]

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