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Bacterial remediation of pesticide polluted soils: Exploring the feasibility of site restoration

Author(s)
Bokade, PriyankaGaur, Vivek KumarTripathi, VarshaBobate, ShishirManickam, NatesanBajaj, Abhay
Issued Date
2023-01
DOI
10.1016/j.jhazmat.2022.129906
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/59627
Citation
JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS, v.441, pp.129906
Abstract
For decades, reclamation of pesticide contaminated sites has been a challenging avenue. Due to increasing agricultural demand, the application of synthetic pesticides could not be controlled in its usage, and it has now adversely impacted the soil, water, and associated ecosystems posing adverse effects on human health. Agri-cultural soil and pesticide manufacturing sites, in particular, are one of the most contaminated due to direct exposure. Among various strategies for soil reclamation, ecofriendly microbial bioremediation suffers inherent challenges for large scale field application as interaction of microbes with the polluted soil varies greatly under climatic conditions. Methodically, starting from functional or genomic screening, enrichment isolation; func-tional pathway mapping, production of tensioactive metabolites for increasing the bioavailability and bio-accessibility, employing genetic engineering strategies for modifications in existing catabolic genes to enhance the degradation activity; each step-in degradation study has challenges and prospects which can be addressed for successful application. The present review critically examines the methodical challenges addressing the feasi-bility for restoring and reclaiming pesticide contaminated sites along with the ecotoxicological risk assessments. Overall, it highlights the need to fine-tune the available processes and employ interdisciplinary approaches to make microbe assisted bioremediation as the method of choice for reclamation of pesticide contaminated sites.
Publisher
ELSEVIER
ISSN
0304-3894
Keyword (Author)
BiosurfactantBioaugmentationBiostimulationBioremediationEco-toxicological risk
Keyword
GENETICALLY-ENGINEERED MICROORGANISMPSEUDOMONAS-PUTIDA KT2440METHYL PARATHIONORGANOPHOSPHORUS HYDROLASEGAMMA-HEXACHLOROCYCLOHEXANESIMULTANEOUS DEGRADATIONENHANCED BIODEGRADATIONCONTAMINATED SITE2,4-DICHLOROPHENOXYACETIC ACIDMICROBIAL-DEGRADATION

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