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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Poiger is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Poiger.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2011

Saccharin and Other Artificial Sweeteners in Soils: Estimated Inputs from Agriculture and Households, Degradation, and Leaching to Groundwater

Ignaz J. Buerge; Martina Keller; Hans-Rudolf Buser; Markus D. Müller; Thomas Poiger

Artificial sweeteners are consumed in substantial quantities as sugar substitutes and were previously shown to be ubiquitously present in the aquatic environment. The sweetener saccharin is also registered as additive in piglet feed. Saccharin fed to piglets was largely excreted and, consequently, found in liquid manure at concentrations up to 12 mg/L, where it was stable during 2 months of storage. Saccharin may thus end up in soils in considerable quantities with manure. Furthermore, other studies showed that saccharin is a soil metabolite of certain sulfonylurea herbicides. Sweeteners may also get into soils via irrigation with wastewater-polluted surface water, fertilization with sewage sludge (1-43 μg/L), or through leaky sewers. In soil incubation experiments, cyclamate, saccharin, acesulfame, and sucralose were degraded with half-lives of 0.4-6 d, 3-12 d, 3-49 d, and 8-124 d, respectively. The relative importance of entry pathways to soils was compared and degradation and leaching to groundwater were evaluated with computer simulations. The data suggest that detection of saccharin in groundwater (observed concentrations, up to 0.26 μg/L) is most likely due to application of manure. However, elevated concentrations of acesulfame in groundwater (up to 5 μg/L) may result primarily from infiltration of wastewater-polluted surface water through stream beds.


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2009

Hydrophilic anthropogenic markers for quantification of wastewater contamination in ground- and surface waters.

Maren Kahle; Ignaz J. Buerge; Markus D. Müller; Thomas Poiger

Hydrophilic, persistent markers are useful to detect, locate, and quantify contamination of natural waters with domestic wastewater. The present study focused on occurrence and fate of seven marker candidates including carbamazepine (CBZ), 10,11-dihydro-10,11-dihydroxycarbamazepine (DiOH-CBZ), primidone (PMD), crotamiton (CTMT), N-acetyl-4-aminoantipyrine (AAA), N-formyl-4-aminoantipyrine (FAA), and benzotriazole (BTri) in wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs), lakes, and groundwater. In WWTPs, concentrations from 0.14 microg/L to several micrograms per liter were observed for all substances, except CTMT, which was detected at lower concentrations. Loads determined in untreated and treated wastewater indicated that removal of the potential markers in WWTPs is negligible; only BTri was partly eliminated (average 33%). In lakes, five compounds, CBZ, DiOH-CBZ, FAA, AAA, and BTri, were consistently detected in concentrations of 2 to 70 ng/L, 3 to 150 ng/L, less than the limit of quantification to 30 ng/L, 2 to 80 ng/L, and 11 to 920 ng/L, respectively. Mean per capita loads in the outflows of the lakes suggested possible dissipation in surface waters, especially of AAA and FAA. Nevertheless, concentrations of CBZ, DiOH-CBZ, and BTri correlated with the actual anthropogenic burden of the lakes by domestic wastewater, indicating that these compounds are suitable for quantification of wastewater contamination in lakes. Marker candidates were also detected in a number of groundwater samples. Carbamazepine concentrations up to 42 ng/L were observed in aquifers with significant infiltration of river water, receiving considerable wastewater discharges from WWTPs. Concentration ratios between compounds indicated some elimination of BTri and DiOH-CBZ during subsurface passage or in groundwater, while CBZ and PMD appeared to be more stable and thus are promising wastewater markers for groundwater. The wastewater burden in groundwater, estimated with the markers CBZ and PMD, reached up to 6%.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Enantioselective transformation of α-hexachlorocyclohexane by the dehydrochlorinases LinA1 and LinA2 from the soil bacterium Sphingomonas paucimobilis B90A

Mrutyunjay Suar; Andrea Hauser; Thomas Poiger; Hans-Rudolf Buser; Markus D. Müller; Charu Dogra; Vishakha Raina; Christof Holliger; Jan Roelof van der Meer; Rup Lal; Hans-Peter E. Kohler

ABSTRACT Sphingomonas paucimobilis B90A contains two variants, LinA1 and LinA2, of a dehydrochlorinase that catalyzes the first and second steps in the metabolism of hexachlorocyclohexanes (R. Kumari, S. Subudhi, M. Suar, G. Dhingra, V. Raina, C. Dogra, S. Lal, J. R. van der Meer, C. Holliger, and R. Lal, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 68:6021-6028, 2002). On the amino acid level, LinA1 and LinA2 were 88% identical to each other, and LinA2 was 100% identical to LinA of S. paucimobilis UT26. Incubation of chiral α-hexachlorocyclohexane (α-HCH) with Escherichia coli BL21 expressing functional LinA1 and LinA2 S-glutathione transferase fusion proteins showed that LinA1 preferentially converted the (+) enantiomer, whereas LinA2 preferred the (−) enantiomer. Concurrent formation and subsequent dissipation of β-pentachlorocyclohexene enantiomers was also observed in these experiments, indicating that there was enantioselective formation and/or dissipation of these enantiomers. LinA1 preferentially formed (3S,4S,5R,6R)-1,3,4,5,6-pentachlorocyclohexene, and LinA2 preferentially formed (3R,4R,5S,6S)-1,3,4,5,6-pentachlorocyclohexene. Because enantioselectivity was not observed in incubations with whole cells of S. paucimobilis B90A, we concluded that LinA1 and LinA2 are equally active in this organism. The enantioselective transformation of chiral α-HCH by LinA1 and LinA2 provides the first evidence of the molecular basis for the changed enantiomer composition of α-HCH in many natural environments. Enantioselective degradation may be one of the key processes determining enantiomer composition, especially when strains that contain only one of the linA genes, such as S. paucimobilis UT26, prevail.


Water Research | 1995

Fate of secondary alkane sulfonate surfactants during municipal wastewater treatment

Jennifer A. Field; Thomas M. Field; Thomas Poiger; Hansruedi Siegrist; Walter Giger

Abstract A field study was conducted to determine the mass flow of secondary alkane sulfonate (SAS) surfactants in a municipal wastewater treatment plant. The concentration of SAS in samples of sewage (raw sewage, primary and secondary effluent) was determined using solid-phase extraction with C 18 disks and injection port derivatization with gas chromatography/mass selective detection (GC/MS). The concentration of SAS in raw and anaerobically-digested sludge was determined by ion-pair/supercritical fluid extraction and injection-port derivatization GC/MS. The removal of SAS from the waste stream is efficient (99.7%) with approximately 16% (w/w) transferred to sludge. Given current Swiss sludge disposal regulations, a maximum of approximately 350 mg m −2 SAS are applied every three years to a given section of agricultural soil. Of the total SAS mass flow entering the treatment plant, an average of 0.3% (w/w) is discharged to the adjacent receiving water stream.


Environmental Science & Technology | 1994

Determination of secondary alkane sulfonates in sewage wastewaters by solid-phase extraction and injection-port derivatization gas chromatography/mass spectrometry.

Jennifer A. Field; Thomas M. Field; Thomas Poiger; Walter Giger

Secondary alkane sulfonate (SAS) surfactants were determined in aqueous samples from sewage treatment plants using solid-phase extraction (SPE) and a single-step procedure that combines elution and injection-port derivatization for sample analysis using gas chromatography/ mass spectrometry (GC/MS). A tetrabutylammonium ion pair reagent was applied both to elute SAS from C 18 bonded-silica disks as their ion pairs and to derivatize SAS ion pairs under GC injection-port conditions. SAS was effectively recovered from samples of raw sewage (>92%) and from primary (>98%) and secondary (>85%) sewage effluents. No sample cleanup steps were necessary became the identification and quantitation of SAS isomers and homologs were performed using mass selective detection


Environmental Science & Technology | 2012

Enzymatic Conversion of ε-Hexachlorocyclohexane and a Heptachlorocyclohexane Isomer, Two Neglected Components of Technical Hexachlorocyclohexane

Kiran Bala; Birgit Geueke; Milena E. Miska; Daniel Rentsch; Thomas Poiger; Mandeep Dadhwal; Rup Lal; Christoph Holliger; Hans-Peter E. Kohler

α-, β, γ-, and δ-Hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH), the four major isomers of technical HCH, are susceptible to biotic transformations, whereby only α- and γ-HCH undergo complete mineralization. Nevertheless, LinA and LinB catalyzing HCl elimination and hydrolytic dehalogenations, respectively, as initial steps in the mineralization also convert β- and δ-HCH to a variety of mainly hydroxylated metabolites. In this study, we describe the isolation of two minor components of technical HCH, ε-HCH, and heptachlorocyclohexane (HeCH), and we present data on enzymatic transformations of both compounds by two dehydrochlorinases (LinA1 and LinA2) and a haloalkane dehalogenase (LinB) from Sphingobium indicum B90A. In contrast to reactions with α-, γ-, and δ-HCH, both LinA enzymes converted ε-HCH to a mixture of 1,2,4-, 1,2,3-, and 1,3,5-trichlorobenzenes without the accumulation of pentachlorocyclohexene as intermediate. Furthermore, both LinA enzymes were able to convert HeCH to a mixture of 1,2,3,4- and 1,2,3,5-tetrachlorobenzene. LinB hydroxylated ε-HCH to pentachlorocyclohexanol and tetrachlorocyclohexane-1,4-diol, whereas hexachlorocyclohexanol was the sole product when HeCH was incubated with LinB. The data clearly indicate that various metabolites are formed from minor components of technical HCH mixtures. Such metabolites will contribute to the overall toxic potential of HCH contaminations and may constitute serious, yet unknown environmental risks and must not be neglected in proper risk assessments.


Chimia | 2003

Occurrence and Fate of Organic Micropollutants in the Environment: Regional Mass Balances and Source Apportioning in Surface Waters Based on Laboratory Incubation Studies in Soil and Water, Monitoring, and Computer Modeling

Thomas Poiger; Hans-Rudolf Buser; Markus D. Müller; Marianne E. Balmer; Ignaz J. Buerge

Research activities at the plant protection chemistry group of the Federal Research Station in Wadenswil, Switzerland, are primarily focused on the environmental behavior of pesticides and, in some cases, other organic micropollutants. Many old and modern pesticides are chiral and there is growing interest from registration authorities and companies in the different biological activity and environmental behavior and impact of individual stereoisomers. The environmental behavior of chiral pesticides is thus one of our main areas of research. We use monitoring data (e.g. surface waters, wastewater) to establish regional mass balances of a chemical (e.g. in the catchment area of a lake). Mass balances often indicate possible sources and presence of elimination processes such as (bio)degradation, sorption/sedimentation, and volatilization. Elimination processes are further investigated in model systems in the laboratory, including batch incubations in soil and water under different regimes (light/dark, sterile/non-sterile), to distinguish between biotic and abiotic (photolysis, hydrolysis) processes. Environmental models are then used to rationalize the chemo-dynamics of micropollutants in natural systems, integrating data from monitoring and model systems. In some cases, it is possible to use the data for source apportioning of pollutants in the environment, and for monitoring (or prediction) of the effectiveness of pollution prevention measures. In the following report, three examples will be presented which illustrate the general approach outlined above to study the environmental occurrence and behavior of organic micropollutants. These examples include the chiral herbicide mecoprop and the chiral pharmaceutical drug ibuprofen, as well as the ubiquitous natural compound caffeine.


Chemosphere | 2000

Rapid anaerobic degradation of toxaphene in sewage sludge.

Hans-Rudolf Buser; Peter Haglund; Markus D. Müller; Thomas Poiger; Christoffer Rappe

We studied the degradation of technical toxaphene in anaerobic sewage sludge from a municipal waste water treatment plant. Chlorobornanes, chlorocamphenes and related compounds were rapidly degraded, with degradation rates in the order of decachloro>nonachloro>octochloro>heptachloro approximately = hexachloro compounds. The half-lives of individual congeners ranged from <1 day to several days. We also studied the degradation of technical toxaphene in previously sterilized sludge (control), and found it was slower than in the anaerobic sludge. The chlorobornanes that degraded most rapidly in the non-sterilized anaerobic sludge were those with gem chloro substitution on the 6-member carbon-ring, including the toxic congeners, Toxicant A and B. Non-gem chloro substituted congeners, like the biologically persistent P26 and P50, also degraded, but less rapidly. Toxaphene degradation in sewage sludge proceeded primarily via reductive dechlorination, leading to HxSed, HpSed, TC2 and other persistent metabolites. Enantioselective determinations indicated little, if any, enantioselectivity in the formation and/or degradation of these compounds. The isomer and enantiomer profiles of the hexa-, hepta-, and octachlorobornanes are similar to those observed in sediment from the Baltic Sea, suggesting that technical toxaphene is the source of these compounds and that its composition was changed via similar anaerobic degradation pathways.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2016

Leaching of the Neonicotinoids Thiamethoxam and Imidacloprid from Sugar Beet Seed Dressings to Subsurface Tile Drains

Felix E. Wettstein; Roy Kasteel; Maria F. Garcia Delgado; Irene Hanke; Sebastian Huntscha; Marianne E. Balmer; Thomas Poiger; Thomas D. Bucheli

Pesticide transport from seed dressings toward subsurface tile drains is still poorly understood. We monitored the neonicotinoid insecticides imidacloprid and thiamethoxam from sugar beet seed dressings in flow-proportional drainage water samples, together with spray applications of bromide and the herbicide S-metolachlor in spring and the fungicides epoxiconazole and kresoxim-methyl in summer. Event-driven, high first concentration maxima up to 2830 and 1290 ng/L for thiamethoxam and imidacloprid, respectively, were followed by an extended period of tailing and suggested preferential flow. Nevertheless, mass recoveries declined in agreement with the degradation and sorption properties collated in the groundwater ubiquity score, following the order bromide (4.9%), thiamethoxam (1.2%), imidacloprid (0.48%), kresoxim-methyl acid (0.17%), S-metolachlor (0.032%), epoxiconazole (0.013%), and kresoxim-methyl (0.003%), and indicated increased leaching from seed dressings compared to spray applications. Measured concentrations and mass recoveries indicate that subsurface tile drains contribute to surface water contamination with neonicotinoids from seed dressings.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2013

The Chiral Herbicide Beflubutamid (I): Isolation of Pure Enantiomers by HPLC, Herbicidal Activity of Enantiomers, and Analysis by Enantioselective GC-MS

Ignaz J. Buerge; Astrid Bächli; Jean-Pierre De Joffrey; Markus D. Müller; Simon Spycher; Thomas Poiger

For many chiral pesticides, little information is available on the properties and fate of individual stereoisomers. A basic data set would, first of all, include stereoisomer-specific analytical methods and data on the biological activity of stereoisomers. The herbicide beflubutamid, which acts as an inhibitor of carotenoid biosynthesis, is currently marketed as racemate against dicotyledonous weeds in cereals. Here, we present analytical methods for enantiomer separation of beflubutamid and two metabolites based on chiral HPLC. These methods were used to assign the optical rotation and to prepare milligram quantities of the pure enantiomers for further characterization with respect to herbicidal activity. In addition, sensitive analytical methods were developed for enantiomer separation and quantification of beflubutamid and its metabolites at trace level, using chiral GC-MS. In miniaturized biotests with garden cress, (-)-beflubutamid showed at least 1000× higher herbicidal activity (EC50, 0.50 μM) than (+)-beflubutamid, as determined by analysis of chlorophyll a in 5-day-old leaves. The agricultural use of enantiopure (-)-beflubutamid rather than the racemic compound may therefore be advantageous from an environmental perspective. In further biotests, the (+)-enantiomer of the phenoxybutanoic acid metabolite showed effects on root growth, possibly via an auxin-type mode of action, but at 100× higher concentrations than the structurally related herbicide (+)-mecoprop.

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Walter Giger

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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Maren Kahle

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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Christof Holliger

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Hans-Peter E. Kohler

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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Thomas M. Field

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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Birgit Geueke

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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Daniel Rentsch

Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

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Milena E. Miska

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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