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  1. In drinking water chloramination, monochloramine autodecomposition occurs in the presence of excess free ammonia through dichloramine, the decay of which was implicated in N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) formation by (i) dichloramine hydrolysis to nitroxyl which reacts with itself to nitrous oxide (N2O), (ii) nitroxyl reaction with dissolved oxygen (DO) to peroxynitrite or mono/dichloramine to nitrogen gas (N2), and (iii) peroxynitrite reaction with total dimethylamine (TOTDMA) to NDMA or decomposition to nitrite/nitrate. Here, the yields of nitrogen and oxygen-containing end-products were quantified at pH 9 from NHCl2 decomposition at 200, 400, or 800 μeq Cl2·L–1 with and without 10 μM-N TOTDMA under ambient DO (∼500 μM-O) and, to limit peroxynitrite formation, low DO (≤40 μM-O). Without TOTDMA, the sum of free ammonia, monochloramine, dichloramine, N2, N2O, nitrite, and nitrate indicated nitrogen recoveries ±95% confidence intervals were not significantly different under ambient (90 ± 6%) and low (93 ± 7%) DO. With TOTDMA, nitrogen recoveries were less under ambient (82 ± 5%) than low (97 ± 7%) DO. Oxygen recoveries under ambient DO were 88–97%, and the so-called unidentified product of dichloramine decomposition formed at about three-fold greater concentration under ambient compared to low DO, like NDMA, consistent with a DO limitation. Unidentified product formation stemmed from peroxynitrite decomposition products reacting with mono/dichloramine. For a 2:2:1 nitrogen/oxygen/chlorine atom ratio and its estimated molar absorptivity, unidentified product inclusion with uncertainty may close oxygen recoveries and increase nitrogen recoveries to 98% (ambient DO) and 100% (low DO). 
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  2. Funk, Michael A (Ed.)
    Inorganic chloramines are commonly used drinking water disinfectants intended to safeguard public health and curb regulated disinfection by-product formation. However, inorganic chloramines themselves produce by-products that are poorly characterized. We report chloronitramide anion (Cl–N–NO2) as a previously unidentified end product of inorganic chloramine decomposition. Analysis of chloraminated US drinking waters found Cl–N–NO2in all samples tested (n= 40), with a median concentration of 23 micrograms per liter and first and third quartiles of 1.3 and 92 micrograms per liter, respectively. Cl–N–NO2warrants occurrence and toxicity studies in chloraminated water systems that serve more than 113 million people in the US alone. 
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  3. Abstract Specialized or secondary metabolites are small molecules of biological origin, often showing potent biological activities with applications in agriculture, engineering and medicine. Usually, the biosynthesis of these natural products is governed by sets of co-regulated and physically clustered genes known as biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs). To share information about BGCs in a standardized and machine-readable way, the Minimum Information about a Biosynthetic Gene cluster (MIBiG) data standard and repository was initiated in 2015. Since its conception, MIBiG has been regularly updated to expand data coverage and remain up to date with innovations in natural product research. Here, we describe MIBiG version 4.0, an extensive update to the data repository and the underlying data standard. In a massive community annotation effort, 267 contributors performed 8304 edits, creating 557 new entries and modifying 590 existing entries, resulting in a new total of 3059 curated entries in MIBiG. Particular attention was paid to ensuring high data quality, with automated data validation using a newly developed custom submission portal prototype, paired with a novel peer-reviewing model. MIBiG 4.0 also takes steps towards a rolling release model and a broader involvement of the scientific community. MIBiG 4.0 is accessible online at https://mibig.secondarymetabolites.org/. 
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