Impact of textile dyes on human health and bioremediation of textile industry effluent using microorganisms: current status and future prospects

Author:

Sudarshan Shanmugam1ORCID,Harikrishnan Sekar2,RathiBhuvaneswari Govindarajan3,Alamelu Venkatesan4,Aanand Samraj5,Rajasekar Aruliah6,Govarthanan Muthusamy78

Affiliation:

1. Department of Aquatic Environment Management, TNJFU- Dr. M.G.R Fisheries College and Research Institute , Thalainayeru, Tamil Nadu-614 712 , India

2. Centre of Advanced Study in Marine Biology, Faculty of Marine Sciences, Annamalai University , Parangipettai, Tamil Nadu-608 502 , India

3. Aquatic Environment and Health Management division, ICAR-Central Institute of Fisheries Education , Mumbai, Maharastra-400 061 , India

4. Department of Fish Processing Technology, TNJFU- Dr. M.G.R Fisheries College and Research Institute , Thalainayeru, Tamil Nadu-614 712 , India

5. TNJFU- Erode Bhavanisagar Centre for Sustainable Aquaculture , Erode, Tamil Nadu-638 451 , India

6. Department of Biotechnology, Thiruvalluvar University , Vellore, Tamil Nadu-632 115 , India

7. Department of Environmental Engineering, Kyungpook National University , Daegu 41566 , Republic of Korea

8. Department of Biomaterials, Saveetha Dental College and Hospital, Saveetha Institute of Medical and Technical Sciences , Chennai 600 077 , India

Abstract

AbstractEnvironmental contamination brought on by the discharge of wastewater from textile industries is a growing concern on a global scale. Textile industries produce a huge quantity of effluents containing a myriad of chemicals, mostly dyes. The discharge of such effluents into the aquatic environment results in pollution that adversely affects aquatic organisms. Synthetic dyes are complex aromatic chemical structures with carcinogenic and mutagenic properties in addition to high biological oxygen demand (BOD) and chemical oxygen demand (COD). This complex aromatic structure resists degradation by conventional techniques. The bioremediation approach is the biological clean-up of toxic contaminants from industrial effluents. Biological treatment methods produce less or no sludge and are cost-effective, efficient, and eco-friendly. Microorganisms, mostly microalgae and bacteria, and, in some instances, fungi, yeast, and enzymes decolorize textile dye compounds into simple, non-toxic chemical compounds. Following a thorough review of the literature, we are persuaded that microalgae and bacteria might be one of the potential decolorizing agents substituting for most other biological organisms in wastewater treatment. This article presents extensive literature information on textile dyes, their classification, the toxicity of dyes, and the bioremediation of toxic textile industry effluent utilizing microalgae and bacteria. Additionally, it combines data on factors influencing textile dye bioremediation, and a few suggestions for future research are proposed.

Funder

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

Central Institute of Fisheries Education

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine,Biotechnology

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