2,4-Dichlorophenoloxyacetic Acid
By Jeanette Jacobs
2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic
acid (2,4-D)is
a highly selective broadleaf herbicide.9 Herbicides are a group of
compounds that can control unwanted plants. A selective herbicide is one that
controls weeds in a crop without damaging that crop. In 1945, 2,4-D was
introduced as one of the first selective herbicides. At that time many cash
crops were grass-like plants. This herbicide was unique because it effectively
killed broadleaf plants typical of many "weeds" but not grass-like
plants.9This was a
significant breakthrough.
2,4-D, a member of the
phenoxy family of herbicides, rapidly became the most widely used herbicide in
the world.After 50 years of use, 2,4-D
is still the third most widely used herbicide in the United States and Canada,
and the most widely used worldwide.15 Its major uses in agriculture are on wheat and small grains,
sorghum, corn, rice, sugar cane, low-till soybeans, rangeland, and pasture. It
is also used on rights-of-way, roadsides, non-crop areas, forestry, lawn and
turf care, and on aquatic weeds.9
The most common use for 2,4-D, is post-emergent weed
control in agricultural crops.2,4-D
comes in the formulation of granular, amine and ester liquids and aerosol spray
(foam).2,4-D has complex mechanisms of
action against weeds, resembling those of auxins (growth hormones).Once absorbed 2,4-D is translocated within
the plant and accumulates at the growing points of roots and shoots where it
inhibits growth.8
2,4-D/a-ketoglutarate (a-KG) dioxygenase (TfdA) is an Fe(II) and a-ketoglutarate-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the first step in degradation of the herbicide 2,4-D.This enzyme couples the oxidative decarboxylation of a-KG to the hydroxylation of a side chain carbon atom.The resultant hemiacetal spontaneously decomposes to form 2,4-dichlorophenol (2,4-DCP), succinate, glyoxalate and carbon dioxide.4

Figure 1: 2,4-D
reaction with a-ketoglutarate and O2
, catalyzed by the enzyme TfdA and the cofactor Fe2+which produces 2,4-DCP, glyoxylate,
succinate and carbon dioxide.
The enzyme TfdA possesses
multiple essential histidine residues, whereas catalytically essential cysteine
and lysine groups do not appear to be present.4

Figure 2.Model for the active site of TfdA.
The three residues proposed to ligate the ferrous ion of TfdA are shown along with a possible coordination mode for the substrates, a-KG and 2,4-D.Histidine implicated in catalysis and/or binding of 2,4-D, is also illustrated.
Mechanistically, TfdA resembles numerous other a-KG-dependent dioxygenases from plants, animals, fungi, and bacteria that catalyze similar hydroxylation reactions at unactivated carbon centers.The genes encoding the enzymes involved in these processes in Alcaligenes eutrophus JMP 134 have been localized to the pJP4 plamid, cloned and sequenced.4
This plasmid was transformed
into Escherichiacoli JM109 and the recombinant cells were shown to synthesize high
levels of a peptide with relative molecular mass 32000 g/mol.Despite the abundance of TfdA, the
2,4-D-degrading activity in cell extracts was very low compared to the rate of
degradation in whole cells of A.
eutrophus JMP134.The presence or
absence of reducing agents had no effect on activity.The presence of a protease inhibitor during early stages of TfdA
purification enhances the stability of the enzyme by preventing conversion of
the subunit to an inactive TfdA fragment of apparent molecular mass 27000
g/mol.Conversions are found to occur
after cell disruption rather than during the cell cultivation period, and shows
homodimeric structure.The enzyme
exhibits maximum activity at pH 6.5-7: however, it is stable over a pH range of
6.5-11.3
Ferrous ion is absolutely
required for activity of TfdA and cannot be replaced by other divalent cations
tested such as, Co(II), Cu(II), Li(II), Mg(II), Mn(II), Ni(II), or Zn(II).Ascorbic acid stimulates dioxygenase
activity and reduces the rate of enzyme inactivation by a metal ion-mediate
processn.Ferrous ion alone
is unable to sustain enzyme catalysis over long time periods, which was shown
by a time-dependent decreases in enzyme activity.The enzyme inactivation results from a metal ion-mediated event
by the retention of activity when the enzyme was stored in the absence of metal
ions and in the presence of EDTA, which exhibits the greatest affinity and
highest catalytic efficiency for 2,4-D.3
Nonhalogenated
phenoxyacetate possesses a larger Km value than the halogenated
substrates.Similarly, the Km value
for 2-phenoxypropionate is substantially larger that that of
2-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy)propionate.The
additional methyl group in the side chain of these two compounds greatly
decreases the kcat values for hydroxylation, due to the change from
a secondary to a tertiary carbon atom. Although a-KG is the preferred
cosubstrate for the enzyme, TfdA can use a range of other a-ketoacids with lower efficiencies.3Addition of an extra methylene groups
between the a-ketoacid group and the free
carboxyl group, as in a-ketoadipate can lead to
small changes in the kinetic constants.In contrast, removal of one of the methylene groups, as in oxalacetate,
led to an ineffective substrate.In the
absence of 2,4-D, there was no decomposition of a-KG.3
Chemical modification studies were used to provide
evidence consistent with the absence of essential thiol or arginine residues
and the presence of multiple essential histidine residues in the enzyme.Studies were used on iodoacetamide, N-ethylmaleimide,
and butanedione which failed to affect TfdA activity, but the addition of
diethylpyrocarbonate (DEP), a histidine-selective reagent, led to rapid
pseudo-first-order loss of activity.The ability of 2,4-D, a-KG, Fe(II) plus ascorbate
and combinations of these substances to protect the enzyme against DEP
inactivation was examined.What was
found was that none of the individual compounds are able to protect the enzyme
against inactivation by DEP, but the combinations of 2,4-D plus Fe(II) or a-KG was very effective in protecting the enzyme
from inactivation by DEP.This
indicates that there are requirements for positive charges at the binding sites
of 2,4-D and a-KG, which are essential
histidine residues that are present at the binding sites for each of these
substrates.One or more additional
histidine residues may be buried in the protein at the Fe(II) binding
site.Binding of 2,4-D and a-KG protects the histidine residues at the
substrate binding sites and protects the Fe(II) ligands by steric constraints.3

Figure 3.Model of the TfdA
active site.
Pesticides and herbicides
used in agriculture are the classic example of anthropogenic chemicals that
enter the Earth’s environment in large amounts via non-point sources.These compounds can adversely affect non-target
organisms and may be detrimental to human health if people are exposed by
direct contact or to residues of the molecules in soil, water or agricultural
products.9
Occupational exposure to 2,4-D has produced serious eye
and skin irritation.Other symptoms of
2,4-D poisoning include nausea, weakness and fatigue and in some cases
neurotoxic effects including inflammation of nerve endings.Some medical reports from practitioners who
have treated victims of acute exposure to 2,4-D mention severe and sometimes
long lasting or even permanent symptoms.This include as well as those listed above, diarrhea, temporary loss of
vision, respiratory tract irritation, confusion, numbness and tingling,
bleeding and chemical hypersensitivity.6
2,4-D enters the body
through inhalation and the skin during occupational exposure. Its mechanism of
action is related to uncoupled oxidative phosphorylation and decreased oxygen
consumption in tissues, as well as to disturbances in carbohydrate and other
metabolic processes.9
Symptoms vary with the
different commercial products because of the specific amounts and types of
additives such as surfactants and solvents. Only poor occupational practices
make possible massive dermal and inhalation overexposure with signs and symptoms
of acute or chronic intoxication.9
2,4-D was a major component
(about 50%) of the product Agent Orange used extensively throughout
Vietnam.However most of the problems
associated with the use of Agent Orange were associated with a contaminant
(dioxin) in the 2,4,5-T component of the defoliant.The association of 2,4-D with Agent Orange has prompted a vast
amount of study on the herbicide.2,4-D
is a Restricted Use Pesticide (RUP) in the United States.Restricted Use Pesticides may be purchased
and used only by certified applicators.7
In general the molecular
mechanisms of pesticide action are poorly understood.However, the lipophilicity of most of them makes lipid-rich
membranes a possible target of their interaction with living organisms.The fluidity of membranes is considered one
of the most sensitive parameters to their exposure to pesticides.An unequivocal relation between changes in
membrane fluidity and the pesticide toxicity has not been established so
far.However, some effects directly
related to toxicity could primarily be due to change in membrane fluidity,
e.g., permeability alteration for electrolytes and nonelectrolytes inhibition
of acetylcholinesterase or changes in lipid composition.In spite of the implications that at least
part of the toxic effects of pesticides could be due to the perturbation of the
lipid phase of the membranes, very little work has been done on the possible
changes in lipid fluidity due to their interactions.7
The negative effects of herbicides/pesticides on the environment caused by residues remaining in the soil can be eliminateded by applying a short decontamination step after harvest of the crops that could diminish resulting leaching into the groundwater.Microorganisms with specific genetic information for the degradation of the supplied herbicides can be inoculated in bulk soil or in the rhizophere of resistant plants with dense roots to increase the degradation rate of the herbicide.9
Bioremediation
of soils containing resistant chemicals by inoculation with specialized strains
has been shown to fail quite often due to several reasons.A major reason is often the poor survival of
the inoculated strain due to competition with the indigenous well-established
populations.To over come this problem,
indigenous bacteria isolated from the same soil could be used either as such or
after being equipped in the laboratory with the necessary degradative
genes.Another alternative is to
stimulate in situ dissemination of the degradative genes present in the applied
strain to other soil bacteria that could result in several genera with the
capability of degrading the novel herbicide.8
The
genes coding the 2,4-D degradation are often located on plasmids, which can be
transferred between wide ranges of bacteria.Recently bioagumentation of a soil by distribution of a 2,4-D
degradative plasmid was shown to be feasible in some soils but not in all.8
Despite the abundance of
information on the biochemistry and genetics related to 2,4-D biodegradation,
information on the feasibility of continuously running systems for the
treatment of concentrated liquid wastes is limited.A concentrated liquid waste stream containing 10 mg/l L of 2,4-D
was tested and treatment of municipal wasterwater by an activated sludge unit
was used, and the results were about 25oo removal.Further testing on other wastewater by other
activated slude systems was found to have ranges of 16 oo
to 50oo removal of 2,4-D5.
2,4-D can enter the environment through discharges and spills arising from a variety of different manufacturers, transporters and through direct application as a weed control agent.It is removed from the environment by biodegradation through several possible pathways with the formation of 2,4-dichlorophenol as an intermediate.2,4-D is removed from the atmosphere by photo-oxidation and rainfall with a half-life of less than 1 day.The half-life of 2,4-D in soil is reported to range from 4-7 days in most soil types up to 6 weeks in acidic soils.2,4-D is rapidly biodegraded in water although some may be degraded by photolysis near the surface.Half-lives in water range from 1 to several weeks under aerobic conditions and can exceed 120 days under anaerobic condition.2,4-D is not expected to accumulate in bottom sediments and mud.Except from some algae it does not bioaccumulate in aquatic or terrestrial organisms because of its rapid degradation.2
Conventional
methods employed to remove small concentrations of organic pollutants in ground
water or industrial discharge, such as air stripping or adsorption by activated
carbon, are not good alternatives for contaminants having low volatility or
poor adsorption properties. Additionally, these methods only transfer the
pollutant from one phase to the other leaving the problem only partially
solved. On the contrary, effective oxidative treatments lead to the complete
mineralization of a great variety of organic substances. Some of these
detoxification methods employ strong oxidants such as hydrogen peroxide or
ozone combined with one activation step initiated by UV radiation.1
Several studies in the past have proposed different reaction mechanism for the photolysis of hydrogen peroxide. It is widely accepted that the main interactions between hydrogen peroxide with UV radiation and free radicals are well represented by reactions in Table 1, (1)-(6).Reaction (7) and (8) in Table 1correspond to the decomposition of any of organic compounds existing in the system by reaction with the generated free radical.1
Initiation:H2O2¾jP ®2OH*(1)
Propagation:H2O2
+ OH*¾K2®HO2* + H2O(2)
H2O2
+ HO2*¾K3® HO2* +
H2O + O2(3)
Termination:2OH*¾K4®
H2O2(4)
2OH*¾K5®H2O2 + O2(5)
OH*+HO2*¾K6®H2O + O2(6)
Decomposition:RH
+ OH*¾K7® products(7)
RH + OH2* ¾K8®products(8)
*In this table, RH represents 2,4-D (2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid); DCP, (2,4-dichlorophenol); and
CHQ (chlorohydroquinone)
Figure 3 shows the main reaction paths proposed for the 2,4-D photodegradation, where the principal reaction intermediates are chlorohydroquinone.2.4-dichlorophenol and humic acids (this last poorly defined compound is usually natural components of river waters and hence considered non-toxic).1

Figure 3. Main reaction paths for the 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid photodegradation. Keys: D (2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid); DCP (2,4-dichlorophenol); CHQ (chlorohydroquinone)
Atmospheric contamination by
2,4-D may occur as a result of ability to vaporize and drift from application
by spraying. Residues in the atmosphere are predominantly in the form of
isopropyl and butyl esters. In large-scale studies in areas of intense 2,4-D
use in Canada, about 40% of all air samples were found to contain between 0.01
and 0.1 µg of 2,4-D per m3. In a general program of air quality
monitoring undertaken in citrus-growing regions in the USA, only 1 out of 880
samples analyzed was found to contain 2,4-D, at a level of 4 µg/m3.No quality standards exist for the amount of
2,4-D allowed in the air of homes.9
.2,4-D is an herbicide that has been heavily used in agriculture all over the world for some fifty years or more.There continues to be high levels of concern about long-term adverse effects of 2,4-D on human health and water pollution.Research chemists and biologists are constantly trying to reduce the environmental impact of 2,4-D and other herbicides. One factor is the amount of chemical required in an application. Other environmental characteristics that are considered include environmental persistence (measured in half-life degradability), soil mobility, volatility, and bioaccumulation. New methods of plant control include biotechnology of the TfdA enzyme with kinetic characteristics that will turn on and off the degradation of 2,4-D.This mechanism will allow less herbicide to be applied for weed control because 2,4-D will not degraded until needed.Other new methods are bioengineering strains of crop seeds that are more resistant to the herbicide used to control weeds.Increased food production, along with concern for the environment, will continue to be important issues.
References
1.Alfano,
M., Brandi, R., and Cassano, A. (2001)Degradation Kinetics of 2,4-D in water employing hydrogen peroxide and
UV radiation.Chemical Engineering Journal. 82, 209-218.
2.Balagué, C., Stürtz, N., Duffard, R., and Evangelista de Duffard, A. (2000)Effect of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid
herbicide on Escherichia coli growth,
chemical composition, and cellular envelope.Environmental Toxicology 16,
43-53.
3.Hausinger,
R and Fukumori, F. (1995)Characterization of the first enzyme in 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid
metabolism.Environmental health Perspectives 103, 37-39
4.Hogan,
D., Smith, S., Saari, E., McCracken, J., and Hausinger, R. (2000)Site-directed mutagenesis of
2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid/a-ketoglutarate
dioxygenase.The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 275:17, 12400-12409
5.Mangat,
S., and Elefsiniotis, P. (1998)Biodegradation of the herbicide 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D)
in sequencing batch reactors. Water
Reserve. 33:3, 861-867.
6.Prescott,
A. G., and John, P. (1996)Annual
Review Plant Physiology, Plant Molecular
Biology 47, 245-271
7.Suwalsky,
M., Benites, M., Villena, F., Aguilar, F., and Sotomayoer, C.(1996) Interaction of
2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) with cell and model membranes. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1285,
267-276
8.Top
E., Maila, M., Clerinx, M., Goris, J., Vos, P., and Verstraete, W.(1998)Methane oxidation as a method to evaluate the removal of
2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) from soil by plasmid-mediated
bioaugmentation. FEMS Microbiology
Ecology. 28, 203-213.
9.Water,
Sanitation and Health. (1998)2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic
acid (2,4-D) Guidelines for drinking-water quality, 2nd ed.. World Health Organization. 2, 191-199
Copyright © 2001 Jeanette Jacobs and Koni Stone
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