4.7 Review

Potential use of fungal-bacterial co-cultures for the removal of organic pollutants

Journal

CRITICAL REVIEWS IN BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 3, Pages 361-383

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/07388551.2021.1940831

Keywords

Bioremediation; bacteria; fungi; fungal-bacterial interactions; co-cultures; soil remediation; wastewater treatment; waste gas treatment

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1736255]
  2. NSF EPSCoR RII Track-1 CREWS Research Seed Funding

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Fungi and bacteria co-exist in various environments where their interactions can range from antagonism to cooperation, influencing survival, colonization, distribution, and stress resistance. Mixed microbial communities composed of fungi and bacteria exhibit unique associations that can result in efficient degradation and removal of organic pollutants. Engineering artificial fungal-bacterial co-cultures presents key aspects and challenges, while offering future prospects for environmental remediation.
Fungi and bacteria coexist in a wide variety of natural and artificial environments which can lead to their association and interaction - ranging from antagonism to cooperation - that can affect the survival, colonization, spatial distribution and stress resistance of the interacting partners. The use of polymicrobial cultivation approaches has facilitated a more thorough understanding of microbial dynamics in mixed microbial communities, such as those composed of fungi and bacteria, and their influence on ecosystem functions. Mixed (multi-domain) microbial communities exhibit unique associations and interactions that could result in more efficient systems for the degradation and removal of organic pollutants. Several previous studies have reported enhanced biodegradation of certain pollutants when using combined fungal-bacterial treatments compared to pure cultures or communities of either fungi or bacteria (single domain systems). This article reviews: (i) the mechanisms of pollutant degradation that can occur in fungal-bacterial systems (e.g.: co-degradation, production of secondary metabolites, enhancement of degradative enzyme production, and transport of bacteria by fungal mycelia); (ii) case studies using fungal-bacterial co-cultures for the removal of various organic pollutants (synthetic dyes, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, pesticides, and other trace or volatile organic compounds) in different environmental matrices (e.g. water, gas/vapors, soil); (iii) the key aspects of engineering artificial fungal-bacterial co-cultures, and (iv) the current challenges and future perspectives of using fungal-bacterial co-cultures for environmental remediation.

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