生物矿化
极端环境
生物圈
降级(电信)
环境化学
氧气
材料科学
污染物
矿化(土壤科学)
环境修复
天体生物学
化学
纳米技术
化学工程
污染
地质学
生态学
有机化学
生物
氮气
工程类
计算机科学
细菌
电信
古生物学
作者
Zhi‐Lai Chi,Guanghui Yu,H. Henry Teng,Hai-Gang Liu,Jian Wang,Cong‐Qiang Liu,Qirong Shen,Geoffrey Michael Gadd
标识
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.2c01388
摘要
Fungal-mineral interactions can effectively alleviate cellular stress from organic pollutants, the production of which are expected to rapidly increase owing to the Earth moving into an unprecedented geological epoch, the Anthropocene. The underlying mechanisms that may enable fungi to combat organic pollution during fungal-mineral interactions remain unclear. Inspired by the natural fungal sporulation process, we demonstrate for the first time that fungal biomineralization triggers the formation of an ultrathin (hundreds of nanometers thick) exoskeleton, enriched in nanosized iron (oxyhydr)oxides and biomolecules, on the hyphae. Mapped biochemical composition of this coating at a subcellular scale via high spatial resolution (down to 50 nm) synchrotron radiation-based techniques confirmed aromatic C, C-N bonds, amide carbonyl, and iron (oxyhydr)oxides as the major components of the coatings. This nanobiohybrid system appeared to impart a strong (×2) biofunctionality for fungal degradation of bisphenol A through altering molecular-level trade-offs between lattice oxygen and oxygen vacancy. Together, fungal coatings could act as "artificial spores", which enable fungi to combat physical and chemical stresses in natural environments, providing crucial insights into fungal biomineralization and coevolution of the Earth's lithosphere and biosphere.
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