The use of dyes dates to ancient times and has increased due to population and industrial growth, leading to the rise of synthetic dyes. These pollutants are of great environmental impact and azo dyes deserve special attention due their widespread use and challenging degradation. Among the biological solutions developed to mitigate this issue, bacteria are highlighted for being versatile organisms, which can be applied as single organism cultures, microbial consortia, in bioreactors, acting in the detoxification of azo dyes breakage by-products and have the potential to combine biodegradation with the production of products of economic interest. These characteristics go hand in hand with the ability of various strains to act under various chemical and physical parameters, such as a wide range of pH, salinity, and temperature, with good performance under industry, and environmental, relevant conditions.
Species | Dye | Optimum Values of Phisicochemical Parameters for Bacterial Decolorization | Degradation Mechanism | Local of Bacterial Isolation | Maximum Degradation | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shewanella marisflavi | Xylidine Ponceau 2R | |||||
- | ||||||
89% (30 °C, 50 mg/L of dye concentration, 24h incubation and under agitation conditions) | ||||||
[ | ||||||
47 | ||||||
] | ||||||
Main Bacteria | Wastewater Source | Degradation Mechanism | Country | Maximum Degradation and Experiment Conditions | Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Micrococcus luteus | ||||||
20–30% of salinity | Flocculation and Enzymatic | China | ||||
Dyehouse | Adsorption and Enzymatic | Japan | ||||
≈ | 100% (30% of salinity, anaerobic conditions and 22h incubation) | [ | 28 | ] | ||
Laboratory | [ | 48 | ] | |||
Pseudomonas extremorientalis | Congo Red | 50 mg/L of dye concentration, 2.5–5% of salinity and 0.6 U/mL enzyme concentration | Enzymatic-Laccase | Tunísia | 79.8 ± 2.1% (50 mg/L of dye concentration, 2.5–5% of salinity, 24h incubation and 0.6 U/mL enzyme concentration) | |
Pseudomonas aeruginosa | - | Enzymatic-Azoreductase | India | 62%-Laboratory | ||
[ | 29 | ] | ||||
[ | ||||||
Aliiglaciecola lipolytica | Congo Red | 35 °C, <100 mg/L of dye concentration, 0–1% of salinity, pH 6–7, >4 g/L of glucose. | Adsorption and Enzymatic-Laccase and Azoreductase | - | >90% (35 °C, 25 mg/L of dye concentration, 1% of salinity, pH 6 and 4 g/L of glucose) | [30] |
49 | ] | |||||
Pseudomonas sp. | Textile Industries | Enzymatic-Laccase | India | 90%-Laboratory | [50] | |
Enterococcus faecalis, Shewanella indica, Oceanimonas smirnovii and Clostridium bufermentans | 8 different dyes | Varied depending of bacteria strain and dye | Enzymatic-Azoreductase and phenol oxidases | |||
Pseudomonas sp. and | ||||||
China | ||||||
Bacillus sp. | ||||||
96.5% ( | ||||||
Mill effluent outlet | ||||||
E. faecalis | strain and | C | ||||
- | India | Pseudomonas | 95% | Bacillus 97%-Laboratory | ||
. | bufermentans | with Dye Acid Orange 7 when pH ranged from 5 to 8, respectively) | [ | 31 | ] | |
[ | 51 | ] | ||||
Bacillus sp. | 7 different dyes | |||||
Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Pseudomonas putida | ||||||
50–100 mg/L of dye concentration, pH 10, 30 °C, with glucose and yeast extract supplementation. | ||||||
Enzymatic | ||||||
and | ||||||
Ethiopia | ||||||
Bacillus cereus | ||||||
100% (pH 10, 30 °C, anoxic and anaerobic conditions) | [ | |||||
Textile Factory | ||||||
32 | ] | |||||
- | Egypt | 92%-Laboratory | [ | 52 | ||
Aeromonas hydrophila | Reactive Red 198 e Reactive Black 5 | pH 5.5–10.0, temperature were and 20–35 °C under anoxic culture | Adsorption and Enzymatic | Taiwan | >90% (pH 5.5–10.0, temperature were and 20–35 °C under anoxic culture) | [33] |
] | ||||||
- | Dye Wastewater Plant | - | Korea | 75%-Real production facility | [53] | |
Comamonas sp. | Direct Red 5B | pH 6.5, 40 °C, static incubation conditions and 300–1100 mg/L of dye concentration. | Enzymatic-Laccase and Lignin Peroxidase | India | 100% (pH 6.5, 40 °C and static incubation conditions) | [34] |
Halomnas sp. | Remazol Black B | Varied depending of bacteria strain. | - | Iran | ≈100% (40 °C) | [35] |
Aeromonas sp. | Reactive Black | Microaerophilic conditions | - | India | ≈100% (Microaerophilic conditions) | [36] |
Oerskovia paurometabola | Acid Red 14 | Anaerobic conditions | Enzymatic | Portugal | 91% (anaerobic conditions) | [37] |
Aeromonas hydrophila, Lysinibacillus sphaericus | Reactive Red 195 | - | Enzymatic-Laccase and Azoreductase | India | 91.96% (pH 8, 37 °C, 100 mg/L of dye concentration and sequential aerobic-microaerophilic conditions) | [38] |
Bacillus sp. | 4 different dyes | - | Enzymatic-Azoreductase | - | - | [39] |
Bacillus sp. | 5 different dyes | - | Enzymatic-Azoreductase | - | - | [40] |
Aeromonas hydrophila, Lysinibacillus sphaericus | 5 different dyes | - | Enzymatic-Azoreductase and Laccase | India | 90.4% (pH 8, 37 °C, 100 mg/L of dye concentration and sequential aerobic-microaerophilic conditions) | [41] |
Lysinibacillus fusiformis | Methyl Red | pH 7.5–8, 30 °C, 100 mg/L of dye concentration and 10–20% (v/v) of inoculum size | Enzymatic-Laccase, Azoreductase and Lignin Peroxidase | - | 96% (aerobic condition, pH 7.5, 30 ± 2 °C, dye concentration of 100 mg/L and 10% (v/v) inoculum size) | [42] |
Pseudomonas stutzeri | Acid Blue 113 | - | Enzymatic-Azoreductase and Laccase | India | 86.2% (static conditions, 37 °C and 300 ppm of dye) | [43] |
Aeromonas sp. | Methyl Orange | pH 6, 5–45 °C, 100–200 mg/L of dye concentration | Enzymatic-laccase, NADH-DCIP reductase, and azo reductase | China | ≈100% (100–200 mg/L of dye concentration; with carbon and nitrogen supplementation; pH 6; 5–45 °C) | [44] |
Proteus mirabilis | Reactive Blue 13 | pH 7, 35 °C and anoxic conditions. | Enzymatic-Laccase, azoreductase and veratryl alcohol oxidase | Nigeria | ≈90% (pH 7) | [45] |
Pseudomonas putida, Bacillus subtilis | 18 different dyes | - | Enzymatic-Azoreductase and Laccase | - | ≈100% | [46] |
Bacillus sp. | Red HE7B | - | Enzymatic-Azoreductase and Laccase |