| Literature DB >> 31438507 |
Md Mahadi Hasan1, Md Nashir Uddin2, Iffat Ara-Sharmeen3, Hesham F Alharby4, Yahya Alzahrani4, Khalid Rehman Hakeem4, Li Zhang5.
Abstract
Phytoremediation is one of the safer, economical, and environment-friendly techniques in which plants are used to recover polluted soils, particularly those containing toxic organic substances and heavy metals. However, it is considered as a slow form of remediation, as plants take time to grow and flourish. Various amendments, including the augmentation of certain chemical substances i.e., ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA), ethylene glycol tetra acetic acid (EGTA), and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) have been used to induce and enhance the phytoextraction capacity in plants. Several reports show that chemical amendments can improve the metal accumulation in different plant parts without actually affecting the growth of the plant. This raises a question about the amount and mechanisms of chemical amendments that may be needed for potentially good plant growth and metal phytoremediation. This review provides a detailed discussion on the mechanisms undertaken by three important chemical amendments that are widely used in enhancing phytoremediation (i.e., EDTA, EGTA, and SDS) to support plant growth as well as soil phytoremediation. A core part of this review focuses on the recent advances that have been made using chemical amendments in assisting metal phytoremediation.Entities:
Keywords: biostimulation; cadmium; environmental pollution; oxidative damage; phytoextraction
Year: 2019 PMID: 31438507 PMCID: PMC6784225 DOI: 10.3390/plants8090295
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1Sources of heavy metals, and foliar, root uptake of heavy metals in plants.
Figure 2Chemical structure of (A) ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA), (B) ethylene glycol tetraacetic acid (EGTA), (C) sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), and binding with metals, M2+(Cd2+, Pb2+ etc.).
Figure 3Chemical amendments assisting the heavy metal uptake in the plants, adapted from Souza et al. [43]. Figure (A) depicts that a hyperaccumulator plant accumulates the heavy metal gradually and constantly during the entire life cycle of the plant, whereas Figure (B) shows that the heavy metal behavior of a non-hyperaccumulator plant is relatively slow, but the metal uptake increases quickly after the application of chemical amendments along with metals.
Effects of heavy metals on the plants with different growing conditions along with chemical amendments.
| Heavy | Growing | Chemical | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Metals | Conditions | Amendments | |
|
| Cd | Pot | EDTA, EGTA, | [ |
|
| SDS | |||
|
| Pb | Pot | EDTA | [ |
|
| Cd | Pot | EDTA | [ |
|
| ||||
|
| Cr | Pot | EDTA | [ |
|
| Cd, Pb | Pot | EDTA | [ |
|
| Cd, Ni | Pot | EDTA | [ |
|
| Cd, Zn, Pb | Pot | EDTA | [ |
|
| Cd, Zn, Pb | Pot | EDTA | [ |
| Pb | Pot | EDTA | [ | |
|
| Cd, Cr, Pb | Pot | EDTA | [ |
|
| Cd, Cr, Pb | Pot | EDTA | [ |
|
| Pb | Pot | EDTA | [ |
| Pb, Zn, Cu | Pot | EDTA | [ | |
| Pb, Zn, Cu | Pot | EDTA | [ | |
| Nongda 108 | ||||
| Pb, Zn | Pot | EDTA | [ | |
|
| ||||
|
| Pb, Zn | Pot | EDTA | [ |
| Cd | Pot | EDTA, EGTA | [ | |
|
| Cd | Pot | EDTA, EGTA, SDS | [ |
|
| Cd | Pot | EDTA, EGTA | [ |
|
| Cd | Pot | EGTA | [ |
|
| Pb | Pot | EDTA, EGTA | [ |
|
| Cd | Pot | EGTA, SDS | [ |
|
| Cd | Pot | EGTA, SDS | [ |
|
| Cu | Field | SDS | [ |
|
| Zn | Pot | SDS | [ |