Fungal bioremediation approaches for the removal of toxic pollutants: Mechanistic understanding for biorefinery applications

Pollution is a global menace that poses harmful effects on all the living ecosystems and to the Earth. As years pass by, the available and the looming rate of pollutants increases at a faster rate. Although many treatments and processing strategies are waged for treating such pollutants, the by-prod...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemosphere (Oxford) 2024-02, Vol.350, p.141123-141123, Article 141123
Hauptverfasser: Navina, Bala Krishnan, Velmurugan, Nandha Kumar, Senthil Kumar, P., Rangasamy, Gayathri, Palanivelu, Jeyanthi, Thamarai, P., Vickram, A.S., Saravanan, A., Shakoor, Awais
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container_end_page 141123
container_issue
container_start_page 141123
container_title Chemosphere (Oxford)
container_volume 350
creator Navina, Bala Krishnan
Velmurugan, Nandha Kumar
Senthil Kumar, P.
Rangasamy, Gayathri
Palanivelu, Jeyanthi
Thamarai, P.
Vickram, A.S.
Saravanan, A.
Shakoor, Awais
description Pollution is a global menace that poses harmful effects on all the living ecosystems and to the Earth. As years pass by, the available and the looming rate of pollutants increases at a faster rate. Although many treatments and processing strategies are waged for treating such pollutants, the by-products and the wastes or drain off generated by these treatments further engages in the emission of hazardous waste. Innovative and long-lasting solutions are required to address the urgent global issue of hazardous pollutant remediation from contaminated environments. Myco-remediation is a top-down green and eco-friendly tool for pollution management. It is a cost-effective and safer practice of converting pernicious substances into non-toxic forms by the use of fungi. But these pollutants can be transformed into useable products along with multiple benefits for the environment such as sequestration of carbon emissions and also to generate high valuable bioactive materials that fits as a sustainable economic model. The current study has examined the possible applications of fungi in biorefineries and their critical role in the transformation and detoxification of pollutants. The paper offers important insights into using fungal bioremediation for both economically and environmentally sound solutions in the domain of biorefinery applications by combining recent research findings. [Display omitted] •Mycoremediation uses fungi to remediate pollutants.•Fungal species with varying capabilities in degrading pollutants are discussed.•Circular economy which utilizes fungi to transform pollutants into valuable resources are reviewed.•Synergism with phytoremediation were elucidated.•Challenges and future works were summarized.
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subjects Carbon neutrality
Circular economy
Fungi
Myco-remediation
Pollutants
title Fungal bioremediation approaches for the removal of toxic pollutants: Mechanistic understanding for biorefinery applications
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