Searching for Chemical Agents Suppressing Substrate Microbiota in White-Rot Fungi Large-Scale Cultivation

Author:

Maruška Audrius1,Mickienė Rūta1,Kaškonienė Vilma1ORCID,Grigiškis Saulius2,Stankevičius Mantas1,Drevinskas Tomas1,Kornyšova Olga1,Donati Enrica3ORCID,Tiso Nicola1ORCID,Mikašauskaitė-Tiso Jurgita1,Zacchini Massimo3ORCID,Levišauskas Donatas14,Ragažinskienė Ona5,Bimbiraitė-Survilienė Kristina1,Kanopka Arvydas1,Dūda Gediminas1

Affiliation:

1. Instrumental Analysis Open Access Centre, Vytautas Magnus University, Vileikos St. 8, LT-40444 Kaunas, Lithuania

2. JSC Biocentras, Pagirių St. 1P, LT-14118 Pagiriai, Lithuania

3. National Research Council, Area Della Ricerca di Roma 1, Via Salaria Km 29,300, Monterotondo, 00015 Rome, Italy

4. Process Control Department, Kaunas University of Technology, Studentų St. 50, LT-51368 Kaunas, Lithuania

5. Botanical Garden of Vytautas Magnus University, Ž. E. Žilibero 6, LT-46324 Kaunas, Lithuania

Abstract

Edible fungi are a valuable resource in the search for sustainable solutions to environmental pollution. Their ability to degrade organic pollutants, extract heavy metals, and restore ecological balance has a huge potential for bioremediation. They are also sustainable food resources. Edible fungi (basidiomycetes or fungi from other divisions) represent an underutilized resource in the field of bioremediation. By maximizing their unique capabilities, it is possible to develop innovative approaches for addressing environmental contamination. The aim of the present study was to find selective chemical agents suppressing the growth of microfungi and bacteria, but not suppressing white-rot fungi, in order to perform large-scale cultivation of white-rot fungi in natural unsterile substrates and use it for different purposes. One application could be the preparation of a matrix composed of wooden sleeper (contaminated with PAHs) and soil for further hazardous waste bioremediation using white-rot fungi. In vitro microbiological methods were applied, such as, firstly, compatibility tests between bacteria and white-rot fungi or microfungi, allowing us to evaluate the interaction between different organisms, and secondly, the addition of chemicals on the surface of a Petri dish with a test strain of microorganisms of white-rot fungi, allowing us to determine the impact of chemicals on the growth of organisms. This study shows that white-rot fungi are not compatible to grow with several rhizobacteria or bacteria isolated from soil and bioremediated waste. Therefore, the impact of several inorganic materials, such as lime (hydrated form), charcoal, dolomite powder, ash, gypsum, phosphogypsum, hydrogen peroxide, potassium permanganate, and sodium hydroxide, was evaluated on the growth of microfungi (sixteen strains), white-rot fungi (three strains), and bacteria (nine strains) in vitro. Charcoal, dolomite powder, gypsum, and phosphogypsum did not suppress the growth either of microfungi or of bacteria in the tested substrate, and even acted as promoters of their growth. The effects of the other agents tested were strain dependent. Potassium permanganate could be used for bacteria and Candida spp. growth suppression, but not for other microfungi. Lime showed promising results by suppressing the growth of microfungi and bacteria, but it also suppressed the growth of white-rot fungi. Hydrogen peroxide showed strong suppression of microfungi, and even had a bactericidal effect on some bacteria, but did not have an impact on white-rot fungi. The study highlights the practical utility of using hydrogen peroxide up to 3% as an effective biota-suppressing chemical agent prior to inoculating white-rot fungi in the large-scale bioremediation of polluted substrates, or in the large-scale cultivation for mushroom production as a foodstuff.

Funder

Research Council of Lithuania

Publisher

MDPI AG

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