| Literature DB >> 36060785 |
Vinay Mohan Pathak1, Vijay K Verma1, Balwant Singh Rawat2, Baljinder Kaur3, Neelesh Babu4, Akansha Sharma5, Seeta Dewali6, Monika Yadav7, Reshma Kumari8, Sevaram Singh9,10, Asutosh Mohapatra11, Varsha Pandey12, Nitika Rana13, Jose Maria Cunill14.
Abstract
Pesticides are either natural or chemically synthesized compounds that are used to control a variety of pests. These chemical compounds are used in a variety of sectors like food, forestry, agriculture and aquaculture. Pesticides shows their toxicity into the living systems. The World Health Organization (WHO) categorizes them based on their detrimental effects, emphasizing the relevance of public health. The usage can be minimized to a least level by using them sparingly with a complete grasp of their categorization, which is beneficial to both human health and the environment. In this review, we have discussed pesticides with respect to their global scenarios, such as worldwide distribution and environmental impacts. Major literature focused on potential uses of pesticides, classification according to their properties and toxicity and their adverse effect on natural system (soil and aquatic), water, plants (growth, metabolism, genotypic and phenotypic changes and impact on plants defense system), human health (genetic alteration, cancer, allergies, and asthma), and preserve food products. We have also described eco-friendly management strategies for pesticides as a green solution, including bacterial degradation, myco-remediation, phytoremediation, and microalgae-based bioremediation. The microbes, using catabolic enzymes for degradation of pesticides and clean-up from the environment. This review shows the importance of finding potent microbes, novel genes, and biotechnological applications for pesticide waste management to create a sustainable environment.Entities:
Keywords: DNA damage; allergy; biodegradation; cancer; pesticides; plants; water
Year: 2022 PMID: 36060785 PMCID: PMC9428564 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.962619
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 6.064
FIGURE 1Percentage distribution of pesticides (Nicolopoulou-Stamati et al., 2016; Alengebawy et al., 2021).
FIGURE 2Thematic diagram of the synthesis, production, uses, effects, and eco-friendly management of pesticides.
FIGURE 3Classification of pesticides (Jayaraj et al., 2016; Hassaan and El Nemr, 2020; Malhotra et al., 2021; Souto et al., 2021; Parra-Arroyo et al., 2022).
Generally used pesticides and their chemical structures.
| Name | Structure | Name | Structure |
| DDT (Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane) | Lindane | ||
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| DDD (Dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane) | HCH | ||
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| DDE (Dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene) | Chlordecone | ||
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| Dieldrin | Toxaphene | ||
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| Aldrin | Mirex | ||
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| Endrin | Endosulfan | ||
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| Heptachlor | Chlordane | ||
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Pesticides classification according to WHO guidelines (World Health Organization, 2009).
| Class | LD50 of rat | Hazardous level | |
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| Dermal | Oral | ||
| Ia | Less than 50 mg/kg body weight | Less than 5 mg/kg body weight | Extremely |
| Ib | 50–200 mg/kg body weight | 5–50 mg/kg body weight | Highly |
| II | 200–2000 mg/kg body weight | 50–2000 mg/kg body weight | Moderately |
| III | Above 2000 | Above 2000 | Slightly |
| U | 5000 or above | 5000 or above | Unlikely to present acute hazard |
Pesticides classification according to the Globally Harmonized System GHS (World Health Organization, 2009).
| Category | Classification criteria | |||
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| LD50 of rat dermal | Hazardous description | LD50 of rat oral | Hazardous description | |
| 1 | Less than 50 mg/kg body weight | Lethal if come in skin contact | Less than 5 mg/kg body weight | Lethal if consumed |
| 2 | 50–200 mg/kg body weight | Lethal if come in skin contact | 5–50 mg/kg body weight | Lethal if consumed |
| 3 | 200–1000 mg/kg body weight | Toxic if come in skin contact | 50–300 mg/kg body weight | Toxic if consumed |
| 4 | 1000–2000 mg/kg body weight | Harmful if come in skin contact | 300–2000 mg/kg body weight | Harmful if consumed |
| 5 | 2000–5000 mg/kg body weight | Possibly harmful if come in skin contact | 2000–5000 mg/kg body weight | Possibly harmful if consumed |
Pesticides classification according to pest type, functions, and management strategies.
| Type of pesticide | Type of pests | Functions | Pests and disease management | References |
| Aldicarb | Nematicides | Inhibit nematodes (plants parasites) | Damage tissue | |
| Insecticides | Inhibit insects and other arthropods also | |||
| Atrazine | Herbicides | Destroy weeds and other plants, photosystem-II (PSII)–inhibiting | Use to control grasses and broadleaf weeds in sorghum, corn, and sugar cane crops | |
| Avitrol | Avicides | Chemicals that lethal to small seed-eating birds | Used for population management of certain birds (crows, gulls, cowbirds, blackbirds, starlings, grackles, pigeons, sparrows, red-winged blackbirds) | |
| Azoxystrobin | Fungicides | Kill fungi (blights, rusts, molds, and mildews), azoxystrobin act fungal mitochondrion, binds to cytochrome bc1 complex and inhibit electron transport thorough oxidative phosphorylation. | Uses to kill Oomycetes, Ascomycetes, Deuteromycetes, BasidiomycetesAnd it controls disease like apple scab rusts, rice blast, powdery and downey mildew. | |
| Benzoxazin | Ovicides | Prevention of mites and insects egg growth | In pest managmeent | |
| Bifenazate | Acaricides | Control spiders and mites that feed on plants and animals by altering their growth and development. Target site of Bifenazate is mitochondrial, particularly the Q | Bifenazate uses as an acaricide on strawberry, flowering plants, and nursery ornamentals | |
| Boric acid | Desiccants | Act on plants by drying their tissues | Use to bed bug control | |
| Copper complexes | Bactericides | Prevent bacteria with greater doses, copper works as a broad-spectrum biocide by interfering with nucleic acids, disrupting enzyme active sites, interfering with the energy transport system, cell membranes integrity disrupted | Copper complexes are used to prevent infection of seedlings from plant pathogens by seed treatment | |
| Copper sulfate | Algaecides | Control or kill growth of algae | Alter the algal growth and photosynthesis | |
| Dichlorobenzene | Moth balls | Inhibit molds and moth larvae and prevent cloths damage | Commonly used to control moths, molds, and mildew | |
| Fipronil | Termiticides | Fipronil inhibits termites by acting as a GABA antagonist and leads to excessive CNS excitation and causes death | Used in seed coatings and granular soil treatments to control unwanted arthropods in many kinds of food, horticultural, and turf plants | |
| Methiocarb | Repellents | Repel pest vertebrates and invertebrates by its taste or smell | Use as a seedling bird repellant and also effective against frit fly larvae. | |
| Methoprene | Larvicides | Prevents larvae growth | Uses as mosquito larvicide, also effective against horn flies, mushroom flies in compost, dipteran pests of livestocks, nuisance flies, highly selectivity for insects and no acute toxicity is expected in humans | |
| Metaldehyde | Molluscicides | Prevent mollusk’s (snail’s) usually disturbing growth of plants or crops | Use in vegetables and gardens, to kill slugs, snails, other garden pests | |
| Rotenone | Piscicides | Toxic and act on fishes | Uses in fisheries and fish management strategies (where unbalanced population of fish) | |
| Scytovirin | Virucides | Acts against viruses | Control of viral infections and diseases |
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| Tebuthiuron | Silvicides | Specific to woody vegetation and act on it | Uses to manage the undesirable plants or unwanted forest species and apply to eliminate trees and brush or “entire forest” |
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| Trifluromethyl nitrophenol (TFM) | Lampricides | Target larvae of lampreys by uncoupling mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation and ATP production reduces which ultimately leads to death | TFM used to control invasive sea lamprey ( |
Mode of interaction of various pesticides with DNA.
| Pesticide | Pesticide group | Mode of interaction | References |
| Chloridazon or Pyrazon | Organochlorine herbicide | Intercalation via GC region |
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| Fenitrothion | Organophosphorus insecticide | Partially intercalation via NO2 and the C Form conformation |
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| Permethrin, deltamethrin | Synthetic pyrethroid insecticides | Groove binding and partial intercalation |
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| Methyl Thiophanate | Fungicide | Non-intercalative groove binding via AT region |
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| Propyzamide | Herbicide | Intercalation via AT region |
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| Edifenphos | Organophosphate pesticide | Electrostatic binding minor groove binding via AT region |
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| Tau-fluvalinate, flumethrin | Synthetic pyrethroid pesticide | Hydrogen bonding and Van der Waals forces, minor groove binding via AT region |
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| Dinitramine | Herbicide | Hydrophobic interactions, major groove binding |
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| Resmethrin | Synthetic pyrethroid insecticides | Hydrogen bonds and Van der Waals forces, groove binding via GC region |
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| Pendimethalin | Herbicide | Intercalation via GC region |
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| Organophosphates | Pesticide | DNA methylation |
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| Organophosphate, pyrethroids | Fumigation insecticide | DNA methylation |
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| Endosulfan | Pesticide | DNA hypomethylation |
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| Glyphosate | Pesticide | DNA hypermethylation |
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| Diazinon | Pesticide | DNA hypermethylation |
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| Fonofos, parathion, terbufos | Pesticide | DNA hypermethylation |
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FIGURE 4Major molecular mechanisms associated with pesticides-induced carcinogenesis.
Pesticides degrading microorganisms.
| Type of pesticide | Example | Microorganism | References |
| Organophosphorus | Chlorpyrifos | ||
| Organophosphorus | Parathion | ||
| Organophosphorus | Methyl parathion | ||
| Glyphosate | |||
| Organophosphorus | Coumaphos | ||
| Organophosphorus | Monocrotophos |
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| Organophosphorus | Fenitrothion | ||
| Organophosphorus | Fenthion |
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| Organophosphorus | Diazinon | ||
| Organophosphorus | DDT |
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| Organochlorine | Aldrin |
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| Organochlorine | Dieldrin |
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| Organochlorine | Endosulfan | ||
| Organochlorine | Alpha endosulfan |
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| Organochlorine | Beta endosulfan |
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| Organochlorine | Dichlorodiphenyl-trichloroethane | ||
| Organochlorine | Lindane | ||
| Triazone | Atrazine |
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| Carbamate | Carbafuron |
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| EPTC |
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| Carbafuron |
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| Avermectin | Emamectin Benzoate |
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| Neonicotinoid | Thiamethoxam |
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Bacterial enzymes, responsible for the degradation of pesticides (Ortiz-Hernández et al., 2013).
| Pesticide | Enzyme | Bacteria |
| Gylphosate | Oxidoreductase (Gox) | |
| Endosulfan, aldrin, malathion, DDT, endosulfate | Monooxygenases (Esd) | |
| Hexachlorobenzene, Pentachlorobenzene | P450 |
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| Trifluralin | Dioxygenases (TOD) |
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| Hexachlorocyclohexane | Haloalkane Dehalogenases (Lin B) | |
| Chloro-S-trazina | AtzA | |
| Chloro-S-trazina | TrzN | |
| Hexachlorocyclohexane (Gamma isomer) | Lin A | |
| 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid | TfdA |
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| Pyridyl-oxyacetic acid | TfdA |
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| Pyridyl-oxyacetic acid | DMO |
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| Phosphotriester | Phosphotriesterases (OPH/OpdA) |