• A multicomponent pollutant biotransformation framework was established. • Products of four distinct pollutants were tracked in a multicomponent soil system. • Two inherent biotransformation properties were integrated into the framework. • Transformation product profiles were used to characterize pollutant patterns. • A biotransformation index was developed to prioritize pollutant metabolic levels. Assessing the metabolic prioritization of organic pollutants is crucial for environmental health evaluation. However, conventional methods relying solely on parent compound dissipation or transformation rates were difficult to capture the complexity of environmental transformation, which involved diverse transformation products (TPs), multiple metabolic pathways, and dynamic spatiotemporal distribution patterns. Here, a novel Multicomponent Pollutant Biotransformation (MPB) approach was developed, introducing a data-driven Biotransformation Index (BTI) to decode the metabolic prioritization of four distinct organic pollutants in this system. The framework was designed to integrate two key attributes, temporal product variations ( BTI single ) and pathway-dependent evolution ( BTI change ), with overall extent of biotransformation quantified via time-invariant coefficients (ΔBTI/time) in multicomponent systems. A soil-microbe-earthworm (SME) system was used to evaluate the framework applicability for prothioconazole (PTC) and three PAHs: benzoaanthracene (BaA), benzoapyrene (BaP), and dibenza,hanthracene (DBA). High-resolution screening identified 34, 28, 23, and 12 biotransformation products (TPs), respectively, primarily resulting from desulfurization, hydroxylation, oxygenation, methylation, and dehydration pathways. The time-series data of these TPs were used to validate and refine the approach for the BTI. Results demonstrated that the distinct product profile patterns, characterized by BTI single and BTI change , were observed. Product counts based on |ΔBTI| were well-fitted to a Gaussian distribution (0.70 BaA (0.0560) > BaP (0.0414) > DBA (0.0010). The mechanistic linkage among pollutants was enabled through the integration of structural pathway information into quantitative metrics of metabolic level. This evaluation framework provides a reference for assessing the transport, fate, and ecological risk of organic pollutants across soil ecosystems. A novel evaluation framework was developed to quantify metabolic level of distinct organic pollutants in multicomponent soil system, enabling predictive risk assessment and targeted remediation.
Xue et al. (Wed,) studied this question.