Environmental Research Institute, National University of Singapore, 1 Create Way, 138602, Singapore; Energy and Environmental Sustainability for Megacities (E2S2) Phase II, Campus for Research Excellence and Technological Enterprise (CREATE), 1 CREATE Way, Singapore, 138602, Singapore.
IIRC-3, Plant-Microbe Interaction and Molecular Immunology Laboratory, Department of Biosciences, Faculty of Sciences, Integral University, Lucknow, UP, India.
Chemosphere. 2022 Nov;306:135538. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.135538. Epub 2022 Jul 2.
Heavy metals (HMs) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) have become a major concern to human health and the environment due to rapid industrialization and urbanization. Traditional treatment measures for removing toxic substances from the environment have largely failed, and thus development and advancement in newer remediation techniques are of utmost importance. Rising environmental pollution with HMs and PAHs prompted the research on microbes and the development of genetically engineered microbes (GEMs) for reducing pollution via the bioremediation process. The enzymes produced from a variety of microbes can effectively treat a range of pollutants, but evolutionary trends revealed that various emerging pollutants are resistant to microbial or enzymatic degradation. Naturally, existing microbes can be engineered using various techniques including, gene engineering, directed evolution, protein engineering, media engineering, strain engineering, cell wall modifications, rationale hybrid design, and encapsulation or immobilization process. The immobilization of microbes and enzymes using a variety of nanomaterials, membranes, and supports with high specificity toward the emerging pollutants is also an effective strategy to capture and treat the pollutants. The current review focuses on successful bioremediation techniques and approaches that make use of GEMs or engineered enzymes. Such engineered microbes are more potent than natural strains and have greater degradative capacities, as well as rapid adaptation to various pollutants as substrates or co-metabolizers. The future for the implementation of genetic engineering to produce such organisms for the benefit of the environment andpublic health is indeed long and valuable.
重金属(HMs)和多环芳烃(PAHs)由于工业化和城市化的快速发展,已成为人类健康和环境的主要关注点。传统的去除环境中有毒物质的处理措施在很大程度上已经失效,因此开发和推进更新的修复技术至关重要。由于 HMs 和 PAHs 造成的环境污染日益严重,促使人们研究微生物,并开发基因工程微生物(GEMs),通过生物修复过程来减少污染。各种微生物产生的酶可以有效地处理各种污染物,但进化趋势表明,各种新兴污染物对微生物或酶的降解具有抗性。自然地,可以使用各种技术(包括基因工程、定向进化、蛋白质工程、培养基工程、菌株工程、细胞壁修饰、合理杂交设计以及封装或固定化过程)对现有微生物进行工程改造。使用各种纳米材料、膜和载体对新兴污染物具有高特异性对微生物和酶进行固定化也是捕获和处理污染物的有效策略。目前的综述重点介绍了成功的生物修复技术和利用 GEMs 或工程酶的方法。与天然菌株相比,这些工程微生物具有更强的降解能力,以及更快地适应各种作为底物或共代谢物的污染物的能力。为了保护环境和公众健康而实施遗传工程生产此类生物的未来确实是漫长而有价值的。