posted on 2006-09-15, 00:00authored byStefania Daghino, Francesco Turci, Maura Tomatis, Alain Favier, Silvia Perotto, Thierry Douki, Bice Fubini
Some soil fungi growing on asbestos fibers release
chelators and antioxidants. The bioweathering potential of
fungi has thus been envisaged as a possible route for
bioremediation of asbestos rich soils, where no inactivation
procedures have been established so far. The present
study reports fungal-mediated modification of the surface
reactivity of the fibers and of their potential to damage
DNA in vitro. Verticillium sp. and Paecilomyces sp. were
selected among the fungi isolated from fragments of chrysotile
bearing rocks, as the most potent in iron extraction, and
studied in parallel with F. oxysporum, previously reported to
modify the surface reactivity of asbestos fibers. One
sample of chrysotile from the Western Alps and a sample
of UICC (Union Internationale Contre le Cancer) crocidolite
were incubated with or without fungi. All fungi extracted iron
from both fibers (7.3% from crocidolite and 33.6% from
chrysotile by Verticillium sp.), releasing it into the medium.
F. oxysporum and Paecilomyces sp. suppressed the
potential of the fibers to release hydroxyl radical, while
Verticillium sp. suppressed it on crocidolite but enhanced
it on chrysotile, a hallmark of ongoing mobilization of
reactive iron. Fibers incubated in the growth medium, but
in the absence of fungi, exhibited a remarkable potential
to damage DNA in vitro, measured by the generation of 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2‘-deoxyguanosine, while all the fungi reduced
such effect. Fungi may thus be regarded as appropriate
candidates for bioremediation of asbestos rich soils
whereby the reactive iron ions responsible for DNA damage
are progressively removed from the fibers.