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Trends and thresholds on bacterial degradation of bisphenol-A endocrine disruptor — a concise review

Bisphenol-A (BPA) is a monomer found in polycarbonate plastics, food cans, and other everyday chemicals; this monomer and its counterparts are widely used, culminating in its presence in water, soil, sediment, and the atmosphere. Furthermore, because of its estrogenic and genotoxic properties, it ha...

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Published in:Environmental monitoring and assessment 2022-12, Vol.194 (12), p.886-886, Article 886
Main Authors: Mahesh, N., Shyamalagowri, S., Nithya, T. G., Aravind, J., Govarthanan, M., Kamaraj, M.
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description Bisphenol-A (BPA) is a monomer found in polycarbonate plastics, food cans, and other everyday chemicals; this monomer and its counterparts are widely used, culminating in its presence in water, soil, sediment, and the atmosphere. Furthermore, because of its estrogenic and genotoxic properties, it has been acknowledged as an endocrine disruptor; contamination of BPA in the environment is becoming a growing concern, and ways to effectively mitigate BPA from the environment are currently explored. Hence, the focal point of the review is to collate the bacterial degradation of BPA with the proposed degradation mechanism, explicitly focusing on researches published between 2017 and 2022. BPA breakdown is dependent primarily on bacterial metabolism, although numerous factors influence its fate in the environment. The metabolic routes for BPA breakdown in crucial bacterial strains were postulated, sourced on the transformed metabolite-intermediates perceived through degradation; enzymes and genes associated with the bacterial degradation of BPA have also been included in this review. This review will be momentous to generate a conceptual strategy and stimulate the progress on bacterial mitigation of BPA as a path to a sustainable cleaner environment.
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subjects Atmospheric Protection/Air Quality Control/Air Pollution
Bacteria
Biochemistry
Biodegradation
Bisphenol A
Breakdown
Degradation
Earth and Environmental Science
Ecology
Ecotoxicology
Endocrine disruptors
Engineering
Environment
Environmental Management
Environmental monitoring
Environmental science
Enzymes
Food cans
Food contamination
Genes
Genotoxicity
Intermediates
Metabolism
Metabolites
Microbiological strains
Mitigation
Monitoring/Environmental Analysis
Monomers
Polycarbonate
Reviews
Science
Sediments
Soil contamination
Soil water
Toxicity
Trends
Xenoestrogens
title Trends and thresholds on bacterial degradation of bisphenol-A endocrine disruptor — a concise review
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