0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Remediation Sign in to save

Exploring Potent Fungal Isolates from Sanitary Landfill Soil for In Vitro Degradation of Dibutyl Phthalate

Journal of Fungi 2023 17 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ajay Kumar Shriniketan Puranik, Shriniketan Puranik, Livleen Shukla, Ajay Kumar Aditi Kundu, Ajay Kumar Deeba Kamil, Sangeeta Paul, Sandeep Kumar Singh, Venkadasamy Govindasamy, S. Rajna, Ajay Kumar Sandeep Kumar Singh, S. Rajna, Sandeep Kumar Singh, Dharmendra Kumar, Ajay Kumar

Summary

Researchers isolated fungal strains from sanitary landfill soil and tested their ability to break down dibutyl phthalate, a widely used plasticizer. The most effective isolate, identified as Aspergillus flavus, degraded over 99% of the plasticizer within 15 days by producing esterase enzymes. This is the first report of this fungal species using dibutyl phthalate as its sole carbon source, suggesting potential for bioremediation of plasticizer-contaminated soils.

Study Type In vitro

Di-n-butyl phthalate (DBP) is one of the most extensively used plasticizers for providing elasticity to plastics. Being potentially harmful to humans, investigating eco-benign options for its rapid degradation is imperative. Microbe-mediated DBP mineralization is well-recorded, but studies on the pollutant's fungal catabolism remain scarce. Thus, the present investigation was undertaken to exploit the fungal strains from toxic sanitary landfill soil for the degradation of DBP. The most efficient isolate, SDBP4, identified on a molecular basis as <i>Aspergillus flavus</i>, was able to mineralize 99.34% dibutyl phthalate (100 mg L<sup>-1</sup>) within 15 days of incubation. It was found that the high production of esterases by the fungal strain was responsible for the degradation. The strain also exhibited the highest biomass (1615.33 mg L<sup>-1</sup>) and total soluble protein (261.73 µg mL<sup>-1</sup>) production amongst other isolates. The DBP degradation pathway scheme was elucidated with the help of GC-MS-based characterizations that revealed the formation of intermediate metabolites such as benzyl-butyl phthalate (BBP), dimethyl-phthalate (DMP), di-iso-butyl-phthalate (DIBP) and phthalic acid (PA). This is the first report of DBP mineralization assisted with <i>A. flavus</i>, using it as a sole carbon source. SDBP4 will be further formulated to develop an eco-benign product for the bioremediation of DBP-contaminated toxic sanitary landfill soils.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper