It’s no news that rapid industrialization has caused
numerous environmental problems. Our most densely populated areas are cities of
concrete and glass, where the sky is coated gray from car exhaust, and man-made
lights replace stars for miles. In rural areas, drugs used in farming to treat
diseases in the livestock leak into the water and soil, contaminating and
negatively affecting all surrounding ecosystems, including the microbial
communities (1). Furthermore, our water and soil are becoming
increasingly contaminated with toxic metals, which are also detrimental to
their respective ecosystems, as well as a high risk to human health (2).
Environmental
contamination caused by industrial waste reduces the quality of the
environment, and therefore the quality of life for all organisms.
Traditionally, the issue of contamination has been approached by moving the
contamination elsewhere, generally to landfills. Of course this does not
actually fix the problem, it just gets rid of it in its original setting.
Another method that has been used is destroying or transforming the
contaminants to a harmless form via chemical decomposition (3). It
isn’t hard to see how this method isn’t a great approach either; adding more
chemicals to the mix causes further contamination.
The
best alternative is bioremediation, and particularly mycoremediation.
Bioremediation uses microorganisms that are already part of their environments
to clean up pollution. Mycoremediation more specifically uses fungi. These
fungi eat organic pollutants. Through the use of fertilizers and enhanced
conditions, they grow more rapidly, and therefore breakdown the pollutants at a
faster rate. This is a considerably better approach to solve the problem of
environmental contamination.
Unfortunately,
the field of mycoremediation has not been able to expand enough to be applied
in practice. This is mainly due to the lack of funding for the field. The few
studies that have been conducted on mycoremediation have all yielded successful
results, which indicates that this is indeed a promising field of study. Funding
for research in mycoremediation is crucial, for it is potentially one of the
most preferable solutions to environmental contamination.
Fungi
achieve the digestion of the contaminants by secreting extracellular enzymes
that breakdown organic waste (4). A good example of
the success of mycoremediation is seen in a study by Migliore et al. on
the biodegradation of oxytetracycline by Pleurotus ostreatus. Oxytetracycline
(OTC) is a drug that is heavily used on livestocks in intensive farming to
treat diseases. Due to animal waste disposal, OTC contaminates water, sediments
and soil, negatively affecting microbial community structures and natural
systems. They cultured Pleurotus ostreatus with exposure to varying
concentrations of OTC, and measured mycelial growth, extracellular enzyme
secretion, and the degradation of OTC. Their results demonstrated that P.
ostreatus survived and successfully grew even when exposed to high
concentrations of the drug. While no OTC degradation was observed in the
controls, P. ostreatus almost completely degraded the drug in a few days
(1).
Valentin et al. conducted
a study on the mycoremediation of contaminated wood and soil samples that was
similarly successful. In order to really reflect the conditions of the setting
their results would have potential use in, they used non-sterile conditions in
their experiment. With the intentions of investigating white-rot and
litter-decomposing fungi to treat contamination by chlorinated phenols present
in sawmills, they inoculated non-sterile soil and wood — meaning the soil and
wood had native microbial communities along with contamination — with nine
fungi. The litter-decomposing fungus, Stropharia rugosoannulata, mineralized
and degraded multiple contaminants at a significantly faster rate than
indigenous microbes in soil. Therefore, S. rugosoannulata is a suitable
fungus for mycoremediation of soil contaminated with chlorophenols. In wood,
white-rot fungi grew and degraded contaminants faster than both indigenous
degraders (which were barely present), and litter-decomposing fungi. These
results show that S. rugosoannulata has particularly high potential to
be used in mycoremediation of specifically sawmills containing chlorophenols (5).
This study displays successful fungal growth as well as high degradation
success in realistic conditions. It also pushes to further investigate the
understudied litter-decomposing fungi for mycoremediation. Funding for more
studies of this kind are necessary to improve our understanding of specific
fungal interactions with contaminated environments.
Both these studies
indicate successful usage of fungi in cleaning pollutants. Because this is a
field that leans towards experimentation in rather specific contexts, thorough
research must be done in a variety of contexts in order to ensure its
applicability to real-life scenarios. However, the experimentation that has
been done clearly shows the potential of mycoremediation. Even studies that
have been done indicate the necessity for further research in the field in
order to start applying their results in real life. Environmental contamination
decreases the life quality of all organisms, and using fungi as remedies for
our environment is a sustainable, natural, and affordable solution. With sufficient
funding, this field could grow and become the number one cure for environmental
pollution.
1. Migliore, L. et al., “Biodegradation of
oxytetracycline by Pleurotus ostreatus mycelium: a mycoremediation
technique.” Journal of Hazardous Materials. 215-216, 227-232, 2012.
2. Sharma, A., Sharma, H., “Role Of Vesicular
Arbuscular Mycorrhiza In The Mycoremediation of Heavy Toxic Metals From Soil.”
International Journal of Life Sciences Biotechnology and Pharma Research. 2, no.
3, 418-427, 2013.
3. Vidali, M. "Bioremediation. An Overview*."
Pure Applied Chemistry 73, no. 7, 1163-172. IUPAC, 2001.
4. Adenipekun, C. O., Lawal, R. “Uses of mushrooms in
bioremediation: A review.” Biotechnology and Molecular Biololgy Review, 7, no.
3, 62-68. Academic Journals, 2012.
5. Valentin, L. et al., “Mycoremediation of wood
and soil from an old sawmill area contaminated for decades.” Journal of
Hazardous Materials. 260, 668-675, 2013
Hi Doğa!
ReplyDeleteWhat a fascinating post. Fungi are not widely popular, or even understood in most cases. I for one have never heard of mycoremediation, and the idea that fungi might be used to break down organic pollutants amazes me. Perhaps the greatest barrier to funding this kind of research simply lies in the fact that it is so obscure - since fungi are not well understood by most people, even fewer people would have heard of mycoremediation. If so, then arguments like these would surely facilitate greater funding of research in this field! Have a great Thanksgiving!
Anthony
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteHi!
ReplyDeleteI read your piece for peer review and again, great work! You explained topics and definitions much more clearly here, it was very easy to get through and had good flow throughout. I think it is a very interesting idea, most people would've never thought to use fungi to do much of anything. But writing things like this are really revolutionary, you explained everything so well! Great work.
Hey Doğa,
ReplyDeleteWhat a cool post! This is a really interesting use of fungi, and it's great how you focus on the ability of fungi to target pollutants that might have detrimental effects on the environment or other decomposers. This has definitely convinced me that mycoremediation is a field worthy of some serious funding!
Thanks! Katherine
Hey Doğa,
ReplyDeleteThat is a really frickin cool topic! I like the idea of being able to target specific toxic chemicals and breaking them down in such a variable environment, really really cool. The fact that its so versatile too is what really gets me, this is seriously awesome. One question I must ask though is if this could work in like a standard landfill scenario where you have a lot of toxic chemicals in an areas, could it be possible to find a away to break down all of these chemical rather than individual ones, or would it just not be feasible. Great job again, fantastic post.