Anti-Therapeutic Action: food chain contamination

Surface Display of Multiple Metal-Binding Domains in Deinococcus radiodurans Alleviates Cadmium and Lead Toxicity in Rice

Scientists created genetically engineered bacteria (Deinococcus radiodurans) that can grab and absorb harmful heavy metals like cadmium and lead from soil and water. When these specially designed bacteria colonize rice plant roots, they protect the plants from metal toxicity by removing metals from the environment and boosting the plant’s natural defense systems. This approach could help make rice safer to eat by preventing dangerous metal accumulation in crops grown in contaminated areas.

Read More »

Biological approaches to mitigate heavy metal pollution from battery production effluents: advances, challenges, and perspectives

Battery factories produce dirty water containing harmful heavy metals like lead and cadmium. Instead of using expensive chemical treatments, scientists are finding natural ways to clean this water using plants, bacteria, and other living organisms. These biological methods can remove up to 99% of the metals and are better for the environment. This review examines all these natural cleaning methods and suggests ways to make battery production cleaner and safer.

Read More »

Scoping Review on Mitigating the Silent Threat of Toxic Industrial Waste: Eco-Rituals Strategies for Remediation and Ecosystem Restoration

This review examines how industrial waste contaminates soil and water through heavy metals and chemicals, harming ecosystems and human health through food chain contamination. The study shows that pollutants like cadmium and lead kill aquatic life, reduce soil fertility, and disrupt beneficial soil microorganisms. The review recommends solutions including cleaner manufacturing practices, advanced wastewater treatment, and eco-friendly methods like using plants to absorb contaminants.

Read More »
Scroll to Top