Review of Explosive Contamination and Bioremediation: Insights from Microbial and Bio-Omic Approaches
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Methods Data Extraction and Collection
2.2. Research Methods for Patents
3. Results
3.1. The Output of Related Literature
3.2. Impacts of Explosives Pollution on Microbial Community Dynamics
3.3. Microbial Explosive Degradation and Bioremediation: Advantages and Challenges
Title | Munition Waste | Organism | Species ID | Method | Removal Efficiency | Timeline |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ruminal bioremediation of the high energy melting explosive (HMX) by sheep microorganism [30]. | HMX | Bacterial strains from consortia of ruminal fluid | Anaerovibrio lipolyticus, Butyrivibrio fibriosolvens, etc. | strains in culture with liquid media with 17 µM of HMX with low carbon and nitrogen basal media, after an analysis of HPLC in days 0, 1, 4.5 of incubation. | 90% of all HMX derivatives | In 120 h, the 5 first hours show quickly metabolic change in HMX, later only minor Metabolist found by HPLC by-products. |
Anaerobic biodegradation of RDX and HMX with different co-substrates [31]. | HMX, RDX | Bacterial granular sludge | - | In vitro anaerobic treatment of 33 mg L−1 for each HMX and RDX in water with co-substrates such as such as ammonium chloride, dextrose, sodium acetic, sodium nitrate and sulfate, degradation measured through HPLC within 10 days. | 99.1% and 98.5% in carbon co-substrates after 7 days | In 10 days of anaerobic degradation, RDX concentration decrease quickly than HMX in al co-substrates, in short period of time the study shows kinetics of degradation with monitoring every day. |
Evaluation of biostimulation and bioaugmentation to stimulate RDX degradation in an aerobic groundwater aquifer [32]. | RDX | Bacteria | Gordonia sp. strain KTR9 | In situ remediation by biostimulation (fructose injected) and bioagugmentation (cell injection) in groundwater, with Bioaugmentation treatment costs which is estimated at ~$250 in contrast of 85$ for only biostimulation. | 80% and coefficient rate of 1.2 day−1 For bioaugmentation and 0.7 day−1 for high carbon biostimulation | In third spatially time experiments within 150 days, monitoring of RDX levels and bacterial UFC were a main focus, increase and decrease of bacterial strains after and before remediation techniques were measured giving a good timelapse of this experiment and fidelity of data. |
Enhancing the Potential for in situ Bioremediation of RDX Contaminated Soil from a Former Military Demolition Range [33]. | RDX | Indigenous bacteria for soil samples | - | A column of soil extracted from a former military demolition site and the use of use of waste glycerol for in situ treatment of soils contaminated with energetic-materials, measure with HPLC in the important sites of soil column with 600 mg of RDX. | 95% of removal in 2 months and 99% with the use of glycerol | The timelapse of 40 days offers whole monitoring of RDX, and the data is used to scale-up. |
Passive in situ biobarrier for treatment of comingled nitramine explosives and perchlorate in groundwater on an active range [34]. | RDX, HMX and perchlorate | Biobarrier microorganims | - | A bio-barrier designed for underground water leaked of explosives, injected oil in barrier a well for stimulates the degradation and concentrations of toxic pollutants were for the groundwater stream. | removal averaged 83 ± 17% for the in-barrier wells and 75 ± 21% for the centerline * | In 1000 days of monitoring this timeline of toxics pollutant were collected and give a clear perspective of treatment evolution barrier development and degradation rates. |
Spatially-distinct redox conditions and degradation rates following fieldscale bioaugmentation for RDX-contaminated groundwater remediation [35]. | RDX, HMX and NDBA | Bacterial strains | Gordonia sp. KTR9 and Pseudomonas fluorescens strain I-C | A push up test in well bioaugmentaion for groundwater and soil in expression of XplA and XenB genes. approach to real in situ treatment and long-lasting effect in soil and groundwater. | RDX cleanup level of 0.8 μg L−1 in less than 10 years | The timeline explains years of well degradation of HMX and RDX and by-products like NDAB, microbial status and biogeochemical conditions are monitored constantly in during the study. |
Phytoremediation of multiple persistent pollutants co-contaminated soil by HhSSB transformed plant [36]. | TNT | Plant | Halorhodospira halophila | The heterologous expressing Halorhodospira halophila single-stranded DNA binding protein gene (HhSSB) improves tolerance to 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), 2,4,6-trichlorophenol (2,4,6-TCP), and thiocyanate (SCN−) in A. thaliana and tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea). | TNT and by-products were reduced to 1.63 mg/kg (up to 92% of uptake) ** | In timeline the 30 days are a major advance in degradation and change in plant DNA expression and toxicity tolerance through growth and develop in plants. |
Enhanced phytoremediation of TNT and cobalt co-contaminated soil by AfSSB transformed plant [37]. | TNT | Plant | Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans, Arabidopsis thaliana | The plant’s root length was measured after TNT or CoCl2 exposure to determine their tolerance to TNT and Cobalt. | TNT reduced to 1.23 mg/kg (up to 95% of efficiency uptake) ** | 15 days are enough time for observe degradation and change in plant DNA expression. |
Bioremediation of Explosive TNT by Trichoderma viride [38]. | TNT | Fungi | Trichoderma viride | Growth and toxicity resistant in vitro of soil fungi able to overcome the nitrogen uptake from a toxic pollutant as TNT, degradation levels measured by chromatography with 100 ppm of pollutant. | 90% or less in terms of low concentration in plate | In 11 days, the monitoring of fungi plate growth shows, real degradation and byproducts meanwhile the organism persist and adapt. |
Optimization of process parameters for degradation of HMX with Bacillus toyonensis using response surface methodology [39]. | HMX | Bacteria | Bacillus toyonensis | In vitro response of isolated strain in Response surface methodology for toxic pollutant with 2–6 mg L−1. | 87.7% degradation was achieved at 2 mg L−1 initial HMX | In timeline of 15 days the result described real degradation and inhibition of growth. Monitoring indicates inoculum direct viability dependent of concentration. |
4. Bio-Omoics Approach and Molecular Tools in Bioremediation and Pollution
4.1. Metagenomics for Functional Insights
4.2. Transcriptomics for Gene Expression Analysis
4.3. Proteomics and Metabolomics Applications
5. Innovative Bioremediation Strategies
5.1. Phytoremediation and Rhizoremediation
5.2. Bioaugmentation and Biostimulation
6. Currently Patented Process of RDX, TNT or HMX Bioremediation, Degradation or Attenuation
7. Challenges and Future Directions
7.1. Limited Understanding of Complex Degradation Pathways
7.2. Enhancing Biodegradation Rates
7.3. Long-Term Monitoring and Risk Assessment
7.4. Integration of Bioremediation with Other Approaches
8. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Research Title | Insight in Bio-Omics | Efficiency and Remediation Results | Mechanism to Overcome Toxicity | Timeline Changes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Characteristics of RDX degradation and the mechanism of the RDX exposure response in a Klebsiella sp. Strain [48]. * | Metabolomic profile of a Klebsiella sp. In RDX exposure showing metabolic upregulated genes and the response of several genes in a heat map to adapt to TNT. | 81.9% of the RDX (initial 40 mg L−1) was degraded in first 24 h, compared to non-adaptable organism to environmental stress the efficiency of removal is 3 times higher. | Several compromised genes in bacterial membrane lipid metabolism were upregulated (92 genes) and change composition and structure of membrane to tolerate such stress. | In 25 h of study only the initial and final profile after degradation were measured, the monitoring of strain develop in time remains unknown and predicted behavior is based on metabolomic results. |
Microbial Community Dynamics during Acetate Biostimulation of RDX-Contaminated Groundwater [58]. | Field evidence in bioaugmentation in metagenomics profiles and how bacterial abundance and geochemical properties change through 1 year of RDX and heavy metal pollution. | Constant degradation in time with maximum 2 µg L−1 achieve by biostimulation, in contrast with natural attenuation the dynamics of microbial will not be as efficient in remediation. | Microbial community profile change, dominant species dismiss in quantity and other species arise in response, the metagenomic profile evidence a shift in order to proliferate and mineralize RDX. | In one year, the dominance of betaproteobacteria is shift for Bacteroides and deltaproteobacteria arising from 10 to 60% and in specific genera in the last 6 months and arise of geobacteraceae showing a real time shift over microbial community. |
Biostimulation and microbial community profiling reveal insights on RDX transformation in groundwater [59]. | In field evidence of changes in military affected soil and ground water by biostimulator and microbial genomic profiles in high-explosives-machining facility. | 4-NADB, TNT, RDX HMX and MNX were reduced to 400 ppm or less in al case achieving 70% of removal efficiency overall, in 35 days of study. | In response of biostimulation proteobacteria compared to other microbiota, gained domain in all samples showing better response of reducing toxicity in presence of other sources of nutrients to growth. | This study has no in field background of microbial change but instead exemplify the tendency of quick microbial community shift to adapt in field, with several monitored samples. |
Enhanced phytoremediation of TNT and cobalt co-contaminated soil by AfSSB transformed plant [37]. * | Heat map of expressed genes before and after TNT and cobalt application, highlighting metabolism pathways. | TNT reduced to 1.23 mg kg−1 (up to 95% of efficiency uptake) | Upregulated genes in ROS scavenging to face against toxicity and stress of pollutant, specially focused on Cytochromes P450 and glutathione S-transferases, exist several damaged in DNA after TNT exposure. | 15 days of monitoring several genes and proteomics with DNA studies, in overall in vitro study elucidate a probably case in field of adaptation to toxic pollutant. |
Oxygen-insensitive nitroreductase bacteria-mediated degradation of TNT and proteomic analysis [60]. | Proteome of nitro reductases and adaptation due to TNT exposure. | TNT degradation of 100% in 4 h | enriched in the pentose phosphate, glycolysis/gluconeogenesis, and amino acid metabolism pathway to stand against toxicity of TNT in vitro. | Insights in proteome change and the monitoring in short periods evidence proteomics as a tool for understanding byproducts toxicity, metabolisms and mechanism. |
Patent ID-Reference | Inventor | Year | Origin | Assignee | Brief Description | Innovation Related to Bio-Omics | Applications |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DE10359610B4 [86] | Harald Claus, et al. | 2003 | Germany | Johannes Gutenberg Universitaet Mainz | Method for decontamination providing a nitro aromatic-degrading bacterial Isolates, Klebsiella terrigena HB (DSM 16101) or Serratia sp. M3 (DSM 16102), under aerobic or microaerophilic conditions resulting in 10% of the initial TNT concentration were reduced amino derivatives of TNT. Early patent expiration on 19 December 2023. | Isolated strains from contaminated soils and water, uptake and nitro reduction to cell nitrogen requirements | Germany ammunition manufacturing and Germany public use. |
EP2242986B1 [87] | Thomas Smylie, et al. | 2009 | Germany -France | Orica International Pte Ltd. | Deactivating explosives using plant (parts, tissues or whole plant) and wherein physical growth of the plant. Contributes to physical breaking up of the explosive composition in a cartridge. Patent not in force and expiration in 2029. | An industrial and suitable phytoremediation approach | European union industry and military forces |
US20110052537A1 [88] | A. Morrie Craig, collaborators | 2011 | United States of America | Oregon State University | A combined approach from plant uptake of TNT and RDX, a further plant digestion through ruminal anaerobic bacterial community achieving degradation of nitrogen compounds. The process of digesting the plant taking up the pollutant is done in the rumen; The ruminal anaerobic microbes degrade the remediable compounds and render them substantially nontoxic. This process is not toxic and harmless for the Clean-up of 90% and cost less than 112$ per cubic yard (anaerobic ex situ treatment), patent abandoned in 2011. | A complete ruminal anaerobic bacteria analysis through RT-PCR and culture media to assure degrading potential. Investigation of Diversity of Nitroreductase Gene. * | United states department of Agriculture and US military. |
US8721813B1 [89] | Christian Clausen, et al. | 2012 | United States of America | University of Central Florida Research Foundation Inc UCFRF | Uses iron nickel (FeNi), iron palladium (FePd), and magnesium palladium (MgPd) provide in situ catalyst system for remediating and degrading nitro explosive compounds, a first nitroreduction step to further microbial, this is fee related and expired in 2027. | Mixed method of chemical low cost first denitration | US military. |
CN103214058A [90] | Wei Zhixian, et al. | 2012 | China | North University of China | Uses a mixing powder or lanthanum nitrate, cerium nitrate, manganese chloride, ferric nitrate and acid, to assure degradation of TNT and RDX on wastewater also with UV radiation, patent is pending. | - | China industrial wastewater system. |
EP2809402A1 [91] | Clint Brearly and collaborators | 2013 | Germany-France | Orica International Pte Ltd. | Microbial deactivation of explosive compositions, the use of inducer that stimulates an indigenous micro-organism to produce an enzyme that is able to degrade the explosive composition, up to 98% of effectiveness of removal currently not in force patent. | Using indigenous microorganisms and cooperation between European nations * | European union industry of ammunition or demolition and military forces |
CN104195062A [92] | Dilibail t, et al. | 2014 | China | Xinjiang Normal University | Improvement of halophilic archaea and application thereof, Haloarchaeon sp. B13-RDX, with excellent resistance to recalcitrant compounds(explosives pesticides, etc.), expired-fee related and expire in 2034 | Non common Archaea to assure degradation, metabolomics non dominant group | China Agriculture and industry |
CN106497811B [93] | Ren Liwei, et al. | 2015 | China | Lianghua Biotechnology Beijing Co. Ltd. | Uses Pseudomonas aeruginosa CGMCC NO:10842 in soils degradation of TNT under hypersaline (ammonium or other salts) or stressful environmental conditions, this strain is tolerable and have high degradation capability, in general effectivity is up to 98.1%. The patent is active and expires in 2035 | Isolated and preserved common strain in metagenomics of TNT degradation. | China biotechnology industry and military forces |
US10351485B1 [94] | David L. Decker Joseph J. Grzymki | 2017 | United States of America Nevada | Desert Research Institute DRI Nevada System of Higher Education NSHE | Devices and methods for bio-passivating explosives (TNT, RDX, HMX), using a bioreactor with soils and water with microorganisms which are especially desirable candidates to safely consume and passivate explosive (bacteria fungi and others). This methodology involves schematic design of biopassivation reactors and water or additives supply for long terms activities to assure biological activity through time. Active patent with anticipated expiration in 2037. | Technical improvement in bioreactor fusing microbiological develop in other patents and the best process of passivation and degradation in multiuse chamber device. * | United states agricultural department military US forces and US industrial field. |
CN109234246A [95] | Zhou Yang, et al. | 2018 | China | Institute of Chemical Material of CAEP | Use of flavo-enzyme that TNT open loop can be made to degrade, the mutant can be catalyzed the phenyl ring reduction of TNT and the first step of bioremediation. Patent in pending status. | Specific mutation on proteomics mapped enzymes for degradation (metabolomics) | China chemical industries |
CN108277175A [96] | Ye Zhengfang, et al. | 2018 | China | Beijing Institute of Collaborative Innovation | 2,4-dinitrotoluene (DNT) sulfonate efficient degrading bacterial strain Microbacterium sp. X3 CGMCC NO. 14586, involving a TNT derivative in production and biological degradation for complete removal of nitrogen energetic compounds. Removal efficiencies of 61.6% to 100% in dependence of the field application. | A technical biological innovation in gene and microbiological fields, focused on mid step derivative compounds of degradation. | Chemical industry and military forces |
US20200222956A1 [97] | Scott Noland | 2020 | United States of America | Remediation Products Inc | A composition useful for removing energetic compounds (TNT, PENT, ADNT, and more) formulation include adsorbent and polymeric enhanced agent for breaking pollutants and polymers into smaller molecules for optimal degradation. Patent in pending status. | Non catalytic materials use for improve microbial and bioremediation towards formulation use of indigenous microbiome in situ | Chemical industry |
CN112063545B [98] | Dang Kai, et al. | 2020 | China | Northwestern Polytechnical University | Aerobic Pseudomonas CGMCC No. 18373. Can grow by taking an energetic material such as CL-20 (explosive) as a unique nitrogen source. Efficiently degrades the energetic material in the environment leaving almost zero residual pollutant. Active patent. | Aerobic degradation by a only microbial agent, considering a metabolomics and genetic profiling | Chemical industry |
CN116218712A [99] | Zhao Sanping, et al. | 2022 | China | Institute of Chemical Defense Chinese Academy of Military Sciences | Microbial consortia formulation for bioremediation of TNT using Pseudomonas putida T2, Bacillus mycoides T3 and Bacillus amyloliquefaciens T10. The process is improved through the synergistic effect of the three strains and specific inoculums reaching 96.4% of maximum removal. Pending patented process. | Application of biological science and modified GMO in Military fields. Ann biotechnology approach on military concern topics. * | China military Forces |
CN116254195A [100] | Zhao Sanping, et al. | 2022 | China | Institute of Chemical Defense Chinese Academy of Military Sciences | Liquid microbial consortia Pseudomonas aeruginosa TC01, Bacillus thuringiensis TC05 and Bacillus cereus TC08 to be used in wastewater or industrial water. Rapid degradation of up to 97.3% of TNT present. Pending patent related to CN116218712A. | Application of biological science and modified GMO in Military fields, to assure safe environment. * | China military Forces, ammunition wastewater industry |
CN116060434A [101] | Zhao Sanping, et al. | 2023 | China | Institute of Chemical Defense Chinese Academy of Military Sciences | Immobilized Bacillus thuringiensis in soils to assure degradation of explosives over time without perturbing microbiota. Low-cost immobilization matrix of corn stalk biochar and diatomite. Process is suitable for multiple uses, 99% of removal in 50 days. Pending patent. | Patenting all-important cost-effective process to remediate military ammunition environmental impact | China military Forces |
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Corredor, D.; Duchicela, J.; Flores, F.J.; Maya, M.; Guerron, E. Review of Explosive Contamination and Bioremediation: Insights from Microbial and Bio-Omic Approaches. Toxics 2024, 12, 249. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics12040249
Corredor D, Duchicela J, Flores FJ, Maya M, Guerron E. Review of Explosive Contamination and Bioremediation: Insights from Microbial and Bio-Omic Approaches. Toxics. 2024; 12(4):249. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics12040249
Chicago/Turabian StyleCorredor, Daniel, Jessica Duchicela, Francisco J. Flores, Maribel Maya, and Edgar Guerron. 2024. "Review of Explosive Contamination and Bioremediation: Insights from Microbial and Bio-Omic Approaches" Toxics 12, no. 4: 249. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics12040249
APA StyleCorredor, D., Duchicela, J., Flores, F. J., Maya, M., & Guerron, E. (2024). Review of Explosive Contamination and Bioremediation: Insights from Microbial and Bio-Omic Approaches. Toxics, 12(4), 249. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics12040249