Toxicity profiling of 24 l-phenylalanine derived ionic liquids based on pyridinium, imidazolium and cholinium cations and varying alkyl chains using rapid screening Vibrio fischeri bioassay

2019 
Abstract A library of 24 pyridinium-, imidazolium-, and cholinium-based ionic liquids (ILs) with varying alkyl chain from C 2 to C 16 was toxicologically profiled using naturally luminescent marine bacteria Vibrio fischeri . The toxicity (30-min EC 50 ) of studied ILs to Vibrio fischeri ranged from 7.82 µM (4.2 mg/L) (PyC 12 Phe) to 3096 µM (1227 mg/L) (ImidC 2 Phe), i.e. from “toxic” (EC 50 1–10 mg/L) to “not harmful” (EC 50 > 100 mg/L). Inhibition of the bacterial luminescence upon 30-min exposure to ILs correlated well with bacterial viability (exposure for 4 h). The toxicity of studied ILs was largely driven by the length of the alkyl chain (hydrophobicity) and not the type of cationic part of the IL: starting from C 10 all the ILs irrespective of the cationic part proved “toxic”. The toxicity of the studied ILs was increasing in parallel to their hydrophobicity up to log K ow = 1 (C 8 –C 10 ) and then levelling up, being consistent with the previously obtained analogous data sets. The “cut-off” effect reported in this study for longer chain length members of the ILs series leads to the “limit” toxicity level for this type of ILs to be ca. 8 mM. Two open-access online tools ( www.molinspiration.com and www.vcclab.org ) have been applied for the calculation of the K ow values for the 24 ILs reported in this study and 21 ILs reported in the literature. This lead to plotting two nonlinear monotonic correlations between the values of experimental log (1/EC 50 ) and calculated log K ow . The limitation of the online tools and an effect of the ILs structure on the “cut-off” effect have been discussed. The challenge of developing low microbial toxicity surface active ILs remains a significant task to overcome. Our results shed light on the new approaches for designing environmentally benign ILs and functional surfactants. As the hydrophobicity of the ILs significantly correlated with the toxicity, the Vibrio fischeri assay could be considered a powerful tool in providing toxicity data for building and evaluating the QSAR toxicity models for ILs.
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