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Biofilm formed by Hansschlegelia zhihuaiae S113 on root surface mitigates the toxicity of bensulfuron-methyl residues to maize
2022
Zhang, Hao | Qian, Yingying | Fan, Dandan | Tian, Yanning | Huang, Xing
Bensulfuron-methyl (BSM) residues in soil threaten the rotation of BSM-sensitive crops. Microbial biofilms formed on crop roots could improve the ability of microbes to survive and protect crop roots. However, the research on biofilms with the purpose of mitigating or even eliminating BSM damage to sensitive crops is very limited. In this study, one BSM-degrading bacterium, Hansschlegelia zhihuaiae S113, colonized maize roots by forming a biofilm. Root exudates were associated with increased BSM degradation efficiency with strain S113 in rhizosphere soil relative to bulk soil, so the interactions among BSM degradation, root exudates, and biofilms may provide a new approach for the BSM-contaminated soil bioremediation. Root exudates and their constituent organic acids, including fumaric acid, tartaric acid, and l-malic acid, enhanced biofilm formation with 13.0–22.2% increases, owing to the regulation of genes encoding proteins responsible for cell motility/chemotaxis (fla/che cluster) and materials metabolism, thus promoting S113 population increases. Additionally, root exudates were also able to induce exopolysaccharide production to promote mature biofilm formation. Complete BSM degradation and healthy maize growth were found in BSM-contaminated rhizosphere soil treated with wild strain S113, compared to that treated with loss-of-function mutants ΔcheA-S113 (89.3%, without biofilm formation ability) and ΔsulE-S113 (22.1%, without degradation ability) or sterile water (10.7%, control). Furthermore, the biofilm mediated by organic acids, such as l-malic acid, exhibited a more favorable effect on BSM degradation and maize growth. These results showed that root exudates and their components (such as organic acids) can induce the biosynthesis of the biofilm to promote BSM degradation, emphasizing the contribution of root biofilm in reducing BSM damage to maize.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Streptomyces pactum and sulfur mediated the rhizosphere microhabitats of potherb mustard after a phytoextraction trial
2021
Guo, Di | Ali, Amjad | Zhang, Zengqiang
To explore the performance of Streptomyces pactum (Act12) alone (A) and jointly with sulfur (SA) in the phytoextraction practice of potentially toxic elements (PTEs) (Cd and Zn), as well as their effects on soil chemical properties and microbial community composition, this paper selected potherb mustard (Brassica juncea, Coss.) as the test plant to assess the feedback of soil-plant ecosystems. Metal uptake values in lone Act12 treatments were higher than that of Act12 + sulfur treatments, and showed dose dependent with Act12 due to the higher biomass production. According to the biochemical analyses of rhizosphere soils, Act12 inoculation significantly increased urease (20.4%) and dehydrogenase (58.5%) while reducing alkaline phosphatase (68.0%) activity. The production of soil organic acids was, in descending order, formic acid > oxalic acid > malic acid > propionic acid and indicated a stimulated variation under treatments (SA > A > control). High-throughput sequencing revealed that bacterial community compositions were consistent in both phylum and genus taxonomies, while the final overall proportions were modified. The populations of the predominant phyla Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes increased after sulfur application. The contribution of Act12 to the relative abundance of microbiota was minor compared to sulfur. Based on a redundancy analysis, soil chemical properties are the drivers of microbial activities and the main contributor to plant growth. Our results suggested Act12 inoculation may be part of an effective strategy enhancing phytoremediation of PTE-contaminated soils through chemical and biotic processes, and provided important implications for sustainable land utilization and crop production.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Salinity mediated cross-tolerance of arsenic toxicity in the halophyte Salvadora persica L. through metabolomic dynamics and regulation of stomatal movement and photosynthesis
2022
Patel, Monika | Parida, Asish Kumar
Arsenic (As) is a highly toxic metalloid adversely affecting the environment, human health, and crop productivity. The present study assessed the synergistic effects of salinity and As on photosynthetic attributes, stomatal regulations, and metabolomics responses of the xero-halophyte Salvadora persica to decipher the As-salinity cross-tolerance mechanisms and to identify the potential metabolites/metabolic pathways involved in cross-tolerance of As with salinity. Salinity and As stress-induced significant stomatal closure in S. persica suggests an adaptive response to decrease water loss through transpiration. NaCl supplementation improved the net photosynthetic rate (by +39%), stomatal conductance (by +190%), water use efficiency (by +55%), photochemical quenching (by +37%), and electron transfer rate (54%) under As stress as compared to solitary As treatment. Our results imply that both stomatal and non-stomatal factors account for a reduction in photosynthesis under high salinity and As stress conditions. A total of 64 metabolites were identified in S. persica under salinity and/or As stress, and up-regulation of various metabolites support early As-salinity stress tolerance in S. persica by improving antioxidative defense and ROS detoxification. The primary metabolites such as polyphenols (caffeic acid, catechin, gallic acid, coumaric acid, rosmarinic acid, and cinnamic acid), amino acids (glutamic acid, cysteine, glycine, lysine, phenylalanine, and tyrosine), citrate cycle intermediates (malic acid, oxalic acid, and α-ketoglutaric acid), and most of the phytohormones accumulated at higher levels under combined treatment of As + NaCl compared to solitary treatment of As. Moreover, exogenous salinity increased glutamate, glycine, and cysteine, which may induce higher synthesis of GSH-PCs in S. persica. The metabolic pathways that were significantly affected in response to salinity and/or As include inositol phosphate metabolism, citrate cycle, glyoxylate and dicarboxylate metabolism, amino acid metabolism, and glutathione metabolism. Our findings indicate that inflections of various metabolites and metabolic pathways facilitate S. persica to withstand and grow optimally even under high salinity and As conditions. Moreover, the addition of salt enhanced the arsenic tolerance proficiency of this halophyte.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Change in phytoextraction of Cd by rapeseed (Brassica napus L.) with application rate of organic acids and the impact of Cd migration from bulk soil to the rhizosphere
2020
Qiao, Dongmei | Lu, Hongfei | Zhang, Xiaoxian
Adding exogenous low-molecular weight organic acids is an effective technique to improve phytoremediation of Cd-contaminated soil and has been well documented, but how acid application rate affects remediation efficiency and its underlying limiting factors remains elusive. We investigated this using pot experiments with rapeseed (Brassica napus L.) as the model plant. Plastic pots packed with a sandy loam contaminated by Cd at 4.838 mg/kg were amended with acetic acid, oxalic acid, citric acid, malic acid and tartaric acid, respectively, at an application rate gradient varying from 0.0 to 12.0 mmol/kg. Plants in each pot were harvested after growing for five months, and we then measured the exchangeable, carbonate, Fe–Mn oxide, organic and residual Cd in the rhizosphere, as well as Cd in both roots and shoots. The results showed that all organic acids improved plant uptake of Cd and, compared with the control without acid addition, they could improve Cd uptake by more than 100%. The enhanced Cd extraction was due to the increase in exchangeable Cd in the rhizosphere. Plant Cd was weakly correlated to the amount of Cd lost from a unit volume of the rhizosphere due to root extraction (R² = 0.06), but a good negative correlation was found between them after normalizing the lost Cd by root biomass (R² = 0.36). Mass balance analysis revealed that the average Cd content in soil (rhizosphere and bulk soils combined) was much higher than the Cd content in the rhizosphere, and the improved Cd mobility after acid addition was thus due to the increased chelation. As diffusion of ligands in water is one order in magnitude smaller than diffusion of Cd ions, our results suggested that Cd migration from the bulk soil into the rhizosphere was a major factor limiting Cd phytoextraction by rapeseed after adding the exogenous organic acids.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Biouptake of a rare earth metal (Nd) by Chlamydomonas reinhardtii – Bioavailability of small organic complexes and role of hardness ions
2018
Yang, Guang | Wilkinson, Kevin J.
A green alga, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, was used to verify whether a simple Biotic Ligand Model (BLM) could be used to predict carefully controlled short-term biouptake for the lanthanide, Nd. In the absence of ligands or competitors, Nd biouptake was well described by a Michaelis-Menten equation with an affinity constant, KNd, of 10⁶.⁸ M⁻¹ and a maximum internalization flux of Jₘₐₓ = 1.70 × 10⁻¹⁴ mol cm⁻² s⁻¹. For bi-metal mixtures containing Nd and Ca, Mg, Sm or Eu, Nd uptake could also be well modelled by assigning experimentally determined affinity constants of KCₐ = 10².⁶ M⁻¹, KMg = 10³.⁴ M⁻¹, KSₘ = 10⁶.⁵ M⁻¹ and KEᵤ = 10⁶.⁵ M⁻¹. The similar values of Kₘ and Jₘₐₓ for the three rare earth elements (REEs): Sm, Eu and Nd is consistent with them sharing a common metal uptake site. On the other hand, in the presence of the small organic ligands (citric or malic acid), neither, free or total Nd concentrations could be used to quantitatively predict Nd internalization fluxes. In other words, in order to predict biouptake by simple BLM determinations, it was necessary to consider that the Nd complexes were bioavailable. The data strongly suggest that risk evaluations of the REE will require a new paradigm and new tools for evaluating bioavailability.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Cadmium Tolerance Mechanism of Solanum nigrum Based on Subcellular Distribution and Organic Acid Content
2022
Hua, Li | Liang, Zhiyong | Wei, Ting
Solanum nigrum (S. nigrum), a newly discovered Cd-hyperaccumulator, has attracted the attention of many scholars. The present experiment was aimed to explore the difference of Cd accumulation ability among different S. nigrum genotypes and reveal the underlying mechanism. Three different genotypes of S. nigrum were grown in a hydroponic system with different Cd levels (0, 10,25, 50, 100 mg L⁻¹, respectively); the Cd content, subcellular distribution of Cd, net Cd fluxes of in S. nigrum roots, and organic acid content in S. nigrum leaves were investigated. The results showed that Cd was more abundant in cell sap and cell wall fraction than that in organelle fraction. The content of organic acids in three species of S. nigrum was citric acid > tartaric acid > acetic acid > malic acid > oxalic acid. Non-destructive micrometry (NMT) revealed that the net Cd fluxes of the same species of S. nigrum first increased and then decreased with increasing of Cd concentration. And among all tested genotypes, the net Cd fluxes were stronger in the genotype of S. nigrum (HZ).
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Deciphering distinct root exudation, ionomics, and physio-biochemical attributes of Serratia marcescens CP-13 inoculated differentially Cd tolerant Zea mays cultivars
2022
Tanwir, Kashif | Shāhid, Muḥammad | Abbas, Saghir | Qāsim ʻAlī Nīshāpūrī, | Akram, Muhammad Sohail | Chaudhary, Hassan Javed | Javed, Muhammad Tariq
Cadmium (Cd) being a non-essential, mobile, and toxic heavy metal, negatively affects the plant growth and physiology. Current work investigated the impact of Serratia marcescens CP-13 inoculation on root organic acids and nutrient exudates of two maize cultivars varying in Cd tolerance under induced Cd toxicity. Seedlings of Cd-sensitive (Sahiwal-2002) and Cd-tolerant (MMRI-Yellow) cultivars were grown either inoculated or non-inoculated with CP-13 in Petri plates having various Cd stress levels (0, 6, 12, 18, 24, 30 μM). Seedlings were transferred to rhizoboxes for the collection of root exudates and analysis of physio-biochemical traits. Both maize cultivars exuded higher organic acids and nutrient exudates under non-inoculated conditions as compared to inoculated ones. Non-inoculated tolerant cultivar exhibited higher nutrient accumulation, biomass, antioxidants, total chlorophyll, Cd release meanwhile reduced Cd uptake, lipid peroxidation, exudation of organic acids, and nutrients than the sensitive one. However, under CP-13 inoculation, Cd sensitive cultivar exhibited less exudation of organic acids (citric acid, acetic acid, malic acid, glutamic acid, formic acid, succinic acid, and oxalic acid), nutrients mobilization (K, Na, Zn, Ca, and Mg), total chlorophyll, antioxidants (APX, SOD, POD), total soluble sugar, diminished MDA, and Cd uptake. The significant reduction in release of root exudates by both cultivars was likely due to the plant growth promoting traits of CP-13 which confer Cd tolerance. The maximum release of rhizospheric root exudates were documented at 30 μM applied Cd stress. Therefore, the Serratia sp. CP-13 was proposed as a potential inoculant for bioremediation of Cd together with maize cultivars.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Synergistic interaction of fungal endophytes, Paecilomyces formosus LHL10 and Penicillium funiculosum LHL06, in alleviating multi-metal toxicity stress in Glycine max L
2021
Bilal, Saqib | Shahzad, Raheem | Lee, In-Jung
Heavy metal accumulation in crop grains due to hazardous metal contamination is considered a great concern. However, phytobeneficial fungi are reported to have important abilities for the biosafety of crops grown in contaminated soil. Therefore, the current study was undertaken to explore the mutualistic association of plant growth-promoting endophytic fungi in reducing heavy metal concentration in the seeds of soybean plants subsequently grown in contaminated soil, without comprising seed quality and biochemical profile. The results revealed that endophytic Paecilomyces formosus LHL10 and Penicillium funiculosum LHL06 synergistically produced higher amounts of GAs and IAA in a co-cultured medium. Moreover, the co-inoculation of LHL06 and LHL10 to soybean plants grown under multi-metal toxic conditions significantly mitigated the adverse effects of heavy metal toxicity and increased the seed production (number of pods per plants, number of seeds per pod, and 100 seed weight) of soybean plants grown under control and multi-metal toxic conditions. Moreover, the levels of carbohydrates (glucose, sucrose, and fructose), minerals (iron, calcium, magnesium, and potassium), amino acids (serine, glutamic acids, glycine, methionine, lysine, arginine, and proline), and antioxidants (superoxide dismutase, catalase, and peroxidase) were significantly enhanced in sole and co-inoculated plants under control and stress conditions. Whereas organic acids (citric acid, tartaric acid, malic acid, and succinic acid), lipid peroxidation (MDA) products, multi-metal accumulation (nickel, cadmium, copper, lead, chromium, and aluminum), and stress-responsive endogenous abscisic acid levels were significantly decreased in seeds of soybean plants grown under control and multi-metal toxic conditions upon LHL06 and LHL10 sole and co-inoculation. The current results suggested the positive biochemical regulation in seeds for improving the nutritional status and making it safe for human consumption.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Discovery and mechanism study of a novel chromium-accumulating plant, Lonicera japonica Thunb
2019
Meng, Fanxu | Gao, Yuan | Feng, Qingyuan
Finding chromium-accumulating plants is of great interest for phytoremediation of soil contaminated by chromium (Cr). Inspired by Traditional Chinese Medicine, we examined the Cr-resistance and Cr-accumulation of Lonicera japonica Thunb. After a two-phase study using both soil and water culture, we found that L. japonica could be a novel Cr-accumulating plant, which contains an average Cr(III) content of 1297.14 mg.kg⁻¹ in its leaves. The Cr enrichment factor and the Cr transport coefficient of Lonicera japonica was 5.19 and 1.79, respectively. Lonicera japonica is the fifth Cr-accumulating plant discovered worldwide, and the first Cr-accumulating woody plant ever discovered. The results support the conclusions drawn from studies of Cr-accumulating Leersia hexandra that oxalic acid production can increase Cr tolerance whereas citric acid or malic acid has no effect, suggesting that oxalic acid might be a common reason for Cr tolerance in all Cr-accumulating plants. Moreover, this study revealed that the production of anthocyanin and carotene can also increase Cr(III) tolerance, suggesting that anthocyanin and carotene might also account for Cr tolerance in Cr-accumulating plants. We believe that the discovery of Lonicera japonica as a Cr-accumulating plant will offer great opportunities in phytoremediation, and the success should be a strong sign that Traditional Chinese Medicine harbors more secrets to be uncovered with modern science.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Water Treatment Residuals as a Resource for the Recovery of Soil and Water Polluted with Sb(V): Sorption and Desorption Trials at Different pH Values
2018
Castaldi, Paola | Diquattro, Stefania | Lauro, GianPaolo | Marceddu, Salvatore | Garau, Giovanni
In this study, the ability of two different water treatment residuals (Fe- and Al-WTRs) to accumulate antimony(V) from an aqueous solution was investigated at different pH values (pH 4.5 and 6.5). Both WTRs showed a maximum Sb(V) sorption capacity of approx. 0.22 mmol g⁻¹ at pH 4.5 which declined at pH 6.5, particularly for Fe-WTR (i.e., 0.059 and 0.163 mmol g⁻¹ of Sb(V) sorbed by Fe- and Al-WTRs respectively). The greater capacity of WTRs to accumulate antimonate at pH 4.5 seemed to be linked to their chemical properties, such as the pHPZC and the specific surface area. At both pH values, the Sb(V) sorption by Al- and Fe-WTRs followed a pseudo-second-order kinetic model, while the sorption isotherms data fitted the Freundlich model better than the Langmuir one, suggesting the presence of heterogeneous Sb(V) adsorption sites. The sequential extraction of WTR-Sb(V) systems showed that a significant amount of Sb(V) was retained by WTRs through chemical interactions, i.e., through the formation of inner sphere surface complexes [e.g., Fe/Al–O–Sb(V)]). This was particularly relevant at higher pH values (pH 6.5) where more than 60 and 50% of the Sb(V) sorbed by Fe- and Al-WTRs respectively was retained by specific chemical bonding. The residual Sb(V) was higher for the Al-WTR at both pH values, and the highest amount of residual Sb(V) was recorded at pH 4.5 [> 65% of the total Sb(V) sorbed]. SEM-EDX analysis of the WTR-Sb(V) systems showed that antimony was mainly associated with Fe and Al, thus supporting the Sb(V) affinity for Al/Fe oxy-hydroxides. Treatment of WTR-Sb(V) systems with citric and malic acids, at concentrations relevant in the rhizosphere, indicated that Sb(V) could be released by both acids, with 4.5 mM citric acid favoring the highest Sb(V) release in both WTRs. The results from this study suggest that WTRs could be used as alternative amendments for the in situ immobilization of Sb(V) in acidic or circumneutral polluted soils.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]