Abstract

Extremely high levels of decabromodiphenyl ether (BDE-209) are frequently found in the serum of occupationally exposed groups, such as e-waste dismantlers and firefighters. However, the metabolism of BDE-209 in the human body is not adequately studied. In this study, 24 serum samples were collected from workers at a typical e-waste recycling workshop in Taizhou, Eastern China, and the occurrence and fate of these higher brominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) were investigated. The median concentration of the total PBDEs in the serum was 199 ng/g lipid weight (lw), ranging from 125 to 622 ng/g lw. Higher brominated octa- to deca-BDEs accounted for more than 80% of the total PBDEs. Three ortho-hydroxylated metabolites of PBDEs─6-OH-BDE196, 6-OH-BDE199, and 6'-OH-BDE206─were widely detected with a total concentration (median) of 92.7 ng/g lw. The concentrations of the three OH-PBDEs were significantly higher than their octa- and nona-PBDE homologues, even exceeding those of the total PBDEs in several samples, indicating that the formation of OH-PBDEs was a major metabolic pathway of the higher brominated PBDEs in occupationally exposed workers. An almost linear correlation between 6-OH-BDE196 and 6-OH-BDE199 (R = 0.971, P < 0.001) indicates that they might undergo a similar biotransformation pathway in the human body or may be derived from the same precursor. In addition, the occurrence of a series of penta- to hepta- ortho-substituted OH-PBDEs was preliminarily identified according to their unique "predioxin" mass spectral profiles by GC-ECNI-MS. Taken together, the tentative metabolic pathway for BDE-209 in e-waste dismantlers was proposed. The oxidative metabolism of BDE-209 was mainly observed at the ortho positions to form 6'-OH-BDE-206, which later underwent a consecutive loss of bromine atoms at the meta or para positions to generate other ortho-OH-PBDEs. Further studies are urgently needed to identify the chemical structures of these ortho-OH-PBDE metabolites, and perhaps more importantly to clarify the potentially toxic effects, along with their underlying molecular mechanisms.

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