Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Feb 2024)

Reproductive strategy response of the fungi Sarocladium and the evaluation for remediation under stress of heavy metal Cd(II)

  • Lihong Zhang,
  • Caihui Wang,
  • Baoyan Guo,
  • Zidi Yuan,
  • Xueyong Zhou

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 271
p. 115967

Abstract

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Cadmium (Cd) is documented as one of the most lethal metals and poses a major threat to all life forms in the environment due to its toxic effects. Bioremediation of hazardous metals has received considerable and growing interest over the years. The functional fungi with tolerance to the heavy metal Cd were screened from the mining soil samples. Two fungi isolates from coal mine soil were characterized as Sarocladium sp. M2 and Sarocladium sp. M6 based on morphological and partial ITS sequencing analysis. M2 and M6 exhibited high levels of resistance to cadmium, and they were investigated for their micro-morphology and application in heavy metal removal with different concentration Cd(II) (0, 50, 100, 150 and 200 mg/L). The colony morphology of M2 and M6 gradually become very similar to that of bacteria with the increase of cadmium concentration (150–200 mg/L). Micro-morphological studies showed that Cd(II) exposure caused the disappearance of conidial heads and the occurrence of hyphae breakage (100–200 mg/L Cd(II), which is consistent to the colony morphology results. The surface/volume ratio of the spores decreased with the presence of Cd(II). The removal potential of fungi for cadmium was quantified by atomic absorption spectrometry. M2 and M6 showed great potential as bioremediators for highly Cd(II)-contaminated environment. The highest Cd(II) biosorption capacity was 5.13 ± 0.21 mg/g for M2 and 6.04 ± 0.21 mg/g for M6. The highest heavy metal sorption by M2 removed 57.11% ± 4.45% Cd(II) while that of M6 removed 48.35% ± 1.44% Cd(II) in 200 mg/L initial concentration Cd(II). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report that cadmium induced the change of reproduction mode of the Sarocladium, from conidia to arthrospores, which made the colony morphological modifications, from the fungi colony morphology to the bacteria colony morphology. The arthrospore-modified (hyphae breakage) seemed to accumulate greater amounts of heavy metals than filamentous hyphae formation.

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