Abstract

Exposure to environmental pollutants occurs ubiquitously and poses many risks to human health and the ecosystem. Although many analytical methods have been developed to assess such jeopardies, the circumstances applying these means are restricted to linking the toxicities to compositions in the pollutant mixtures. The present study proposes a novel analytical approach, namely, biospectroscopy-bioreporter-coupling (BBC), to quantify and apportion the toxicities of metal ions and organic pollutants. Using a toxicity bioreporter ADPWH_recA and Raman spectroscopy, both bioluminescent signals and spectral alterations had similar dosage- and time-response behavior to the toxic compounds, validating the possibility of coupling these two methods from practical aspects. Raman spectral alterations successfully distinguished the biomarkers for different toxicity mechanisms of individual pollutants, such as ring breathing mode of DNA/RNA bases (1373 cm-1) by Cr, reactive oxygen species-induced peaks of proteins (1243 cm-1), collagen (813 cm-1), and lipids (1255 cm-1) by most metal ions, and indicative fingerprints of organic toxins. The support vector machine model had a satisfactory performance in distinguishing and apportioning toxicities of individual toxins from all input data, achieving a sensitivity of 88.54% and a specificity of 97.80%. This work set a preliminary database for Raman spectral alterations of whole-cell bioreporter response to multiple pollutants. It proved the state-of-the-art concept that the BBC approach is feasible to rapidly quantify and precisely apportion toxicities of numerous pollutant mixtures.

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