Cercosporin-bioinspired photoinactivation of harmful cyanobacteria under natural sunlight via bifunctional mechanisms

Water Res. 2022 May 15:215:118242. doi: 10.1016/j.watres.2022.118242. Epub 2022 Mar 2.

Abstract

Harmful cyanobacterial blooms (HCBs), mainly caused by eutrophication, have deleterious impacts on water resources and pose a great threat to human health and natural ecosystems. Thus, an environmentally-friendly method to inhibit HCBs is urgently needed. Learning from nature, herein, natural product cercosporin, produced by the fungi Cercospora to damage plant cells under natural sunlight, was developed as a powerful photosensitive algicidal reagent to inhibit HCBs. Microcystis aeruginosa could be severely inactivated by 20 μM cercosporin in 36 h with 95% inhibition ratio under 23 W compact fluorescent light irradiation. Further mechanism investigation showed that algal cell walls and membranes along with the antioxidant and photosynthetic systems were damaged via two mechanisms, those being, reactive oxygen species generation and cell adsorption. More importantly, the practical applicability of cercosporin was demonstrated by its effectiveness in a 2 L-scale photoinactivation experiment using cyanobacterial blooms from Taihu Lake, China under natural sunlight with a lower dosage of cercosporin (7.5 μM). This study established the bifunctional mechanisms by which cercosporin inactivates HCBs, opening design possibilities for the development of novel photosensitive algicidal reagents to control HCBs.

Keywords: Cell adsorption; Cercosporin; Harmful cyanobacterial blooms; Photosensitive inactivation; Reactive oxygen species.

MeSH terms

  • Cyanobacteria*
  • Ecosystem
  • Eutrophication
  • Harmful Algal Bloom
  • Humans
  • Lakes
  • Microcystis*
  • Perylene / analogs & derivatives
  • Sunlight

Substances

  • Perylene
  • cercosporin