Fungal Strategies for the Remediation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons 87
and their concentration is elevated in the vicinity of the industries associated with petroleum and gas
production. On the other hand, anthropogenic combustion is the key contributor to PAHs pollution
(Banerjee and Mandal 2020, Ghosal et al. 2016).
PAHs compounds constitute two or more aromatic rings structurally arranged linearly, clusterly
or angularly. Generally, PAH compounds are comprised of carbon-hydrogen atoms; additionally,
nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur atoms can also be involved in forming heterocyclic aromatic compounds.
Broadly PAHs can be categorized into two groups: Low-Molecular-Weight PAHs (LMW-PAHs)
having less than four benzenoid rings whereas High-Molecular-Weight PAHs (HMW-PAHs) with
more than four benzenoid rings. The stability of the PAHs primarily depends on the arrangement of
the aromatic ring; the linear arrangement of aromatic rings (LMW-PAHs) represents the instability
and exhibits fewer recalcitrance characteristics, whereas the angular arrangement of aromatic rings
(HMW-PAHs) is highly stable and exhibits more recalcitrance features of PAHs compounds (Blumer
1976). In addition to this, according to United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA),
16 PAHs are classified as priority environmental pollutants and seven PAHs are categorized as
potent human carcinogens, known as carcinogenic PAHs (USEPA 2002).
PAHs are omnipresent environmental contaminants, generated from the partial burning of fossil
fuels. Air mass movement and transboundary deposition play a significant role in the distribution of
PAH in the environment. Through long-range transport, rural areas are also getting affected, which
are usually situated far from the actual origin of the PAHs. Soil and street dust are the primary sinks
for the deposition of atmospheric PAHs. Furthermore, this opens the gateway for PAHs to enter
the aquatic ecosystem. PAHs are preferentially fragmented and assembled in the particle state of
sediments in aquatic environments due to their hydrophobic nature. In this way, PAHs are present
throughout the multi-compartment structure of the ecosystem, paving the path for various exposure
routes to these carcinogens (Hussain et al. 2018). Broadly, PAHs can evolve from two types of
sources, i.e., naturogenic or anthropogenic sources. The naturogenic sources include forest fires,
volcanic eruptions, petroleum spills, bacterial and algal synthesis and decomposition of litter fall
(Abdel-Shafy and Mansour 2016). Various sources of PAHs and their exposure routes to human are
reported by many researchers. The major contributors of PAHs in the ecosphere are anthropogenic
sources such as the combustion of wood gas, fuels, crude oil and industrial wastes (Hussain
et al. 2018). PAHs produced from anthropogenic sources are mainly categorized into pyrogenic,
petrogenic and biological. Pyrogenic mediated PAHs are produced from partial burning of organic
matter subjected to high-temperature ranges from 350 to 1200°C under anaerobic conditions.
Examples of pyrogenic processes include the partial combustion of motors fuels in automobiles
and coal is thermal distilled into coal tar and coke, thermal cracking of oil deposits asphalt creation.
Therefore, pyrogenic PAHs released in the open air are accumulated more in urban regions. The
PAHs generated from the petrogenic process are similar to pyrogenic except regarding petroleum
processing (Nayak et al. 2022).
In this case, bioremediation is nature’s own green machinery that acts consistently as a good
cleanup, cost-effective, energy-efficient and eco-sustainable alternative equipment in comparison to
the physicochemical techniques viz, soil replacement, soil washing and flushing, chemical reduction
and oxidation, incineration and thermal desorption, vitrification, encapsulation, immobilization,
electrokinetic remediation, nonthermal plasma technology, etc. (Mandree et al. 2021, Kuppusamy
et al. 2017). The main objective of the bioremediation approach is based on the mineralization
of these hazardous compounds into non-toxic compounds and can be achieved by employing
bioremediating representatives like plants (phytoremediation), earthworms (vermiremediation),
as well as microorganisms, i.e., bacteria, yeast, fungi and algae. Such microbial agents are well
equipped with their enzymatic systems to bio transform the PAHs compounds into either carbon
dioxide (CO2) or partially degraded non-toxic metabolites, i.e., byproduct where no CO2 is liberated
(Cerniglia 1993). The microbial PAHs metabolism is generally achieved by a variety of mechanisms
based on the enzymatic depository systems.