Fuente:
Molecules - Revista científica (MDPI)
Molecules, Vol. 31, Pages 1085: Bioremediation of Synthetic Dyes by White-Rot Fungi: Enzymatic Mechanisms, Biosorption, and Environmental Applications
Molecules doi: 10.3390/molecules31071085
Authors:
Anna Carolina Bruno Ferreira
Ygor Velloso Tavares
Nina Rezende Fontana
Thiago Machado Pasin
Carlos Adam Conte-Junior
Alex Graça Contato
The widespread utilization of synthetic dyes within the textile industry, driven by their chemical recalcitrance and diverse chromatic spectra, constitutes a significant global environmental challenge. Improper discharge of these highly stable effluents into natural water bodies leads to severe ecological imbalances, affecting aquatic life and soil integrity while posing indirect risks to human health due to their mutagenic potential. Conventional physicochemical treatment methods are often hindered by prohibitive operational costs and the frequent generation of hazardous secondary pollutants. Consequently, there is an urgent demand for sustainable biotechnological alternatives to mitigate these industrial impacts. Bioremediation, specifically using white-rot fungi, represents a robust and eco-friendly strategy for the degradation of complex aromatic structures. Species such as Trametes versicolor, Pleurotus ostreatus, and Phanerochaete chrysosporium utilize a specialized extracellular enzymatic complex to mineralize toxic compounds effectively. Here we review the ligninolytic capacity of white-rot fungi and their specialized enzymatic systems for environmental sustainability. The primary points are: (i) the biochemical mechanisms of the ligninolytic system of laccases and peroxidases during dye degradation; (ii) the influence of operational parameters such as pH, temperature, and nutrient availability on fungal metabolic efficiency; (iii) the diverse environmental applications of these microorganisms in treating real textile effluents; (iv) the current biotechnological challenges, including maintaining enzymatic stability in non-sterile industrial environments; and (v) the future perspectives for scaling up fungal treatment systems from laboratory research to large-scale industrial implementation.