2 research outputs found
Simultaneous Heavy Metal-Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Removal by Native Tunisian Fungal Species
Multi-contamination by organic pollutants and toxicmetals is common in anthropogenic and
industrial environments. In this study, the five fungal strains Chaetomium jodhpurense (MH667651.1),
Chaetomium maderasense (MH665977.1), Paraconiothyrium variabile (MH667653.1), Emmia lacerata, and
Phoma betae (MH667655.1), previously isolated in Tunisia, were investigated for the simultaneous
removal and detoxification of phenanthrene (PHE) and benzo[a]anthracene (BAA), as well as heavy
metals (HMs) (Cu, Zn, Pb and Ag) in Kirk’s media. The removal was analysed using HPLC, ultra-high
performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC) coupled to a QToF mass spectrometer, transmission
electron microscopy, and toxicology was assessed using phytotoxicity (Lepidium sativum seeds) and
Microtox® (Allivibrio fisherii) assays. The PHE and BAA degradation rates, in free HMs cultures,
reached 78.8% and 70.7%, respectively. However, the addition of HMs considerably affected the BAA
degradation rate. The highest degradation rates were associated with the significant production of
manganese-peroxidase, lignin peroxidase, and unspecific peroxygenase. The Zn and Cu removal
efficacy was considerably higher with live cells than dead cells. Transmission electron microscopy
confirmed the involvement of both bioaccumulation and biosorption processes in fungal HM removal.
The environmental toxicological assays proved that simultaneous PAH and HM removal was
accompanied by detoxification. The metabolites produced during co-treatment were not toxic for
plant tissues, and the acute toxicity was reduced. The obtained results indicate that the tested fungi
can be applied in the remediation of sites simultaneously contaminated with PAHs and HMs.Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research in
TunisiaFEDER/Junta de Andalucía-Consejería de TransformaciónEconómica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades (B-RNM-204-UGR20)Secretaria de Investigacion y posgrado SIP of IPN (Project number 20230427
Congo Red Decolorization and Detoxification by Aspergillus niger: Removal Mechanisms and Dye Degradation Pathway
Congo red is one of the best known and used azo dyes which has two azo bonds (-N=N-) chromophore in its molecular structure. Its structural stability makes it highly toxic and resistant to biodegradation. The objective of this study was to assess the congo red biodegradation and detoxification by Aspergillus niger. The effects of pH, initial dye concentration, temperature, and shaking speed on the decolorization rate and enzymes production were studied. The maximum decolorization was correlated with lignin peroxidase and manganese peroxidase production. Above 97% were obtained when 2 g mycelia were incubated at pH 5, in presence of 200 mg/L of dye during 6 days at 28°C and under 120 to 150 rpm shaking speed. The degraded metabolites were characterized by using LC-MS/MS analyses and the biodegradation mechanism was also studied. Congo red bioconversion formed degradation metabolites mainly by peroxidases activities, i.e., the sodium naphthalene sulfonate (m/z = 227) and the cycloheptadienylium (m/z = 91). Phytotoxicity and microtoxicity tests confirmed that degradation metabolites were less toxic than original dye