| Literature DB >> 33800599 |
Alexandre Campos1, El Mahdi Redouane2, Marisa Freitas1,3, Samuel Amaral1, Tomé Azevedo1, Leticia Loss1, Csaba Máthé4, Zakaria A Mohamed5, Brahim Oudra2, Vitor Vasconcelos1,6.
Abstract
Cyanobacteria are a group of photosynthetic prokaryotes that pose a great concern in the aquatic environments related to contamination and poisoning of wild life and humans. Some species of cyanobacteria produce potent toxins such as microcystins (MCs), which are extremely aggressive to several organisms, including animals and humans. In order to protect human health and prevent human exposure to this type of organisms and toxins, regulatory limits for MCs in drinking water have been established in most countries. In this regard, the World Health Organization (WHO) proposed 1 µg MCs/L as the highest acceptable concentration in drinking water. However, regulatory limits were not defined in waters used in other applications/activities, constituting a potential threat to the environment and to human health. Indeed, water contaminated with MCs or other cyanotoxins is recurrently used in agriculture and for crop and food production. Several deleterious effects of MCs including a decrease in growth, tissue necrosis, inhibition of photosynthesis and metabolic changes have been reported in plants leading to the impairment of crop productivity and economic loss. Studies have also revealed significant accumulation of MCs in edible tissues and plant organs, which raise concerns related to food safety. This work aims to systematize and analyze the information generated by previous scientific studies, namely on the phytotoxicity and the impact of MCs especially on growth, photosynthesis and productivity of agricultural plants. Morphological and physiological parameters of agronomic interest are overviewed in detail in this work, with the aim to evaluate the putative impact of MCs under field conditions. Finally, concentration-dependent effects are highlighted, as these can assist in future guidelines for irrigation waters and establish regulatory limits for MCs.Entities:
Keywords: agricultural plants; agriculture; eutrophic waters; harmful algal blooms; irrigation; microcystins; phytotoxicity; regulatory limits
Year: 2021 PMID: 33800599 PMCID: PMC8065763 DOI: 10.3390/plants10040639
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1Main physiological and growth effects reported in agricultural plants irrigated or grown with microcystin (MC)-rich waters. Plant image is from BioRender (https://biorender.com/, accessed on 28 February 2021).
Overview of morphological and physiological effects in plants related to MCs concentrations reported in the literature. The information is organized by species and study. Moreover, plant species were ordered on the basis of species sensitivity to MCs, taking into account that this assessment depends on the investigation performed (germination test, hydroponics, soil experiment). No changes observed (nd); relative growth rate (RGR); pure toxin (*); crude extract or natural lake/reservoir water containing MCs (#); information not available (--); irrigation with polluted water (IPW); cultivation with polluted soil (CPS); application of cyanobacterial manure (ACM); 2, 4, 4′-Trichlorobiphenyl (PCB-28).
| Plant Species | Growth Stage (1) | Type Experiment/Exposure Time (days) (2) | Toxin (3) | Toxin Conc. (µg/L) (4) | Physiological and Morphological Parameters (5) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
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| Seedlings | Soil culture/42 | MC-LR # | 0.5 | < photosynthetic oxygen production | [ |
|
| Developed plants | Hydroponics/21 | MC-LR # | 50 | < leaf fresh weight | [ |
| MC-LR, CYN # | 5 and 25 | |||||
|
| Seeds | Germination/6 | MC-LR #* | 10 | < total fresh weight | [ |
| 1–10 | < root length; leaf length | |||||
|
| Seeds | Germination/7 | MCs | 50 and 100 | > radicle length | [ |
| 500–20,000 | < radicle length | |||||
| Soil culture/14 | 5–100 | > shoot dry weight | ||||
| Seeds | Soil culture/90 | MCs | 5 | Anticipation of bloom of first flower; anticipation of first inflorescence emergence | [ | |
| Developed plants | Soil culture/24 | MCs | 3–6 | < inhibition of root length; carbohydrate content | [ | |
| 6 | < chlorophyll content; inhibition of stem length; decrease in surface leaf area | |||||
|
| Seedlings | Soil culture/64 | MC-LR *# | raw water + MC-LR | < taproot fresh weight | [ |
| 1-seeds | Soil culture 45 | MC-LR + MC-RR # | 3.76 | < leaf biomass; taproot biomass; taproot volume | [ | |
| 2-seedlings | < taproot biomass; taproot volume | |||||
|
| Seeds | Soil culture/75 | MC-LR + MC-RR # | 3.76 | < leaf biomass; taproot biomass; taproot volume | [ |
| Developed plants | Soil culture/28 | MC-LR * | 1–100 | < taproot mass and taproot diameter; taproot diameter | [ | |
| Developed plants | Soil experiment/32 | MC-LR # | 50 | < root fresh weight; < ascorbic acid (vitamin c) | [ | |
| 10 | > max. fluorescence yield | |||||
|
| Seedlings | Hydroponics/7 | MCs | 5 | < RGR; > H2O2, O2−, MDA | [ |
| 1-seedlings | Hydroponics/7 | MCs | 1 | < plant height | [ | |
| 10–1000 | < plant height; stem diameter; number of leaves; leaf area; root dry weight; shoot dry weight; yield | |||||
| 2-flowering | < plant height; stem diameter; leaf area | |||||
| 100–1000 | < number of leaves; shoot dry weight; root dry weight; yield | |||||
| 3-fruiting | 10–1000 | < plant height; leaf area; root dry weight | ||||
| 100–1000 | < stem diameter; number of leaves; shoot dry weight; yield | |||||
|
| Seeds | Germination/7 | MC-LR, MC-LW *# | 5 | < length of primary root; > lipid peroxidation | [ |
| Seedlings | Irrigation/30 | MCs # | 5–20 | < shoot dry weight; root dry weight; nodules dry weight | [ | |
| 10–20 | < root nodule number | |||||
|
| 1-seeds | Germination/3 | MC-LR *, Cu | 50 | < germination | [ |
| 2-seedlings | Hydroponics/14 | 5 | < total fresh weight | |||
| 50 | < root length | |||||
| 1000 | < shoot length | |||||
| 1-seeds | Soil experiment/60 | MCs | 5.11 | < root biomass; root/shoot biomass; > chlorophyll content | [ | |
| 2-seedling -cotyledon stage | < root biomass; root/shoot biomass | |||||
| 3-seedling with 2 and 4 leaves | nc | |||||
| Seeds | Germination/7 | 50–5000 | > radicle length | [ | ||
| Seedlings | Soil culture/60 | 2.61, 5.22 | nc | [ | ||
| Developed plants | Soil culture/15 | MC-LR + MC-RR # | 0.65–13 | > net photosynthetic rate; leaf tissue transpiration; intercellular CO2 concentration | [ | |
| 0.65 and 2.5 | > stomatal conductance | |||||
| Developed plants | Hydroponics/10 | MC-LR * | 1 and 10 | > leaf biomass | [ | |
| 1 and 100 | > root biomass | |||||
| MC-LR + CYN * | 100 | < leaf biomass | ||||
| Developed plants | Soil culture/28 | MC-LR * | 5–100 | < leaf length | [ | |
| 1–100 | < total leaf mass; number of leaves | |||||
|
| 1-seeds | Germination/7 | MCs | 50 and 100 | < germination | [ |
| 2-seedlings | Hydroponics/48 | < shoot dry weight; root dry weight; rhizobia nodules dry weight | ||||
| 2-seedlings | < shoot and root dry weight; rhizobia nodules dry weight | |||||
| 10–100 | < number of rhizobia nodules | |||||
| Seedlings | Soil culture/28 | MCs | 100 | < shoot and root dry weight; root nodule number | [ | |
|
| Developed plants | Soil culture/10 | MC-LR #*, ACM | 150 | < main root length | [ |
| MC-LR #*, IPW, CPS, ACM | < total weight; aerial part weight | |||||
|
| Developed plants | Soil culture/10 | MC-LR #*, IPW, ACM | 150 | < plant height; total weight | [ |
| MC-LR #*, IPW, CPS, ACM | < main root length; aerial part weight | |||||
|
| Developed plants | Soil culture/10 | MC-LR #*, IPW | 150 | < main root length | [ |
| MC-LR #*, IPW, CPS, ACM | < plant height; total weight; aerial part weight | |||||
|
| Developed plants | Soil culture/7 | MCs | 100–1000 | nc | [ |
|
| Developed plants | Soil culture/7 | MCs | 100–1000 | nc | [ |
|
| Seeds | Germination/10d | MC-RR, MC-LR, MC-YR # | 600–3000 | < germination | [ |
| 120–3000 | < plant height | |||||
|
| Seeds | Germination/1 | (D-Leu1) MC-LR * | 3500 | < germination; > stomatal density and conductivity | [ |
| (D-Leu1) MC-LR and MC-LR * | delay seedling development; > morphological anomalies; delay phototropic response | |||||
| Seeds | Germination/1 | (D-Leu1) MC-LR and MC-LR * | 3500 | < chlorophyll content; delay seedling development | [ | |
| 15000 | > lipid peroxidation | |||||
| (D-Leu1) MC-LRR * | 3500 | < germination | ||||
| Developed plants | Soil culture/28 | MC-LR * | 1 and 5 | > bean length | [ | |
| 10-100 | < bean mass; number of beans | |||||
|
| ||||||
|
| 1-seeds | Germination/3 | MC-RR, MC-LR # | 0.5 | < germination | [ |
| 2-seedlings | Soil culture/15 | < shoot length; root length; photosynthetic oxygen production | ||||
|
| Seeds | Germination/7 | MCs | 5000–20000 | < germination | [ |
| 50 and 100 | > radicle length | |||||
| 20000 | < radicle length | |||||
|
| Seeds | Germination/-- | MCs (6 analogues) #* | 5 | < germination; shoot length; root length | [ |
|
| Seeds | Germination/10 | MC-RR, MC-LR, MC-YR # | 600–3000 | < plant height | [ |
| 120–3000 | < root length; root fresh weight | |||||
| Seedlings | Soil culture/60 | MCs | 2.61, 5.22 | nc | [ | |
| Seedlings | Hydroponics/30 | MCs | 5–500 | < root dry weight | [ | |
| 50–500 | < root length, surface area and volume; root surface area; root volume; lateral root number | |||||
| 500 | < crown root number | |||||
| Seedlings | Hydroponics/30 | MCs | 50–500 | < plant height; root length; shoot dry weight; >membrane permeability | [ | |
| 5–500 | < root dry weight | |||||
| Seedlings | Hydroponics/7 | MCs | 1 | > root biomass | [ | |
| 1–3000 | < stem biomass | |||||
| 100–3000 | < leaves biomass | |||||
| 1000–3000 | < root biomass; grains per panicle; grain weight per panicle; setting percentage | |||||
| Seedlings | Hydroponics/7 | MCs | 1 | > root surface area, shoot height | [ | |
| 10 | < root surface area | |||||
| 100 | < shoot height | |||||
| Seedlings | Hydroponics/7 | MCs | 1 | > leaves dry weight; stem dry weight; roots dry weight | [ | |
| 100–3000 | < leaves dry weight; stem dry weight; roots dry weight; net photosynthetic rate (Pn) | |||||
| Seedlings | Hydroponics/7 | MCs | 5 | > H2O2, O2-, MDA | [ | |
| 10 | < RGR | |||||
| Seedlings | Hydroponics/21 | MCs | 10 | > shoot and root dry weight; P content in shoots and roots | [ | |
| MCs, Cd | 10 | < root dry weight | ||||
| 1-seedlings | Hydroponics/7 | MCs | 10–1000 | < root surface area | [ | |
| 100–1000 | < plant height; Net assimilation rate; filled grains per panicle; seed setting rate; panicle weight; soluble protein, sugar and starch in grain | |||||
| 2-booting | 100–1000 | < plant height; root surface area; Net assimilation rate; filled grains per panicle; seed setting rate; panicle weight; soluble protein, sugar and starch in grain | ||||
| 3-filling | 10–1000 | < seed setting rate | ||||
| 100–1000 | < root surface area; Net assimilation rate; filled grains per panicle; panicle weight; soluble protein, sugar and starch in grain | |||||
| 1000 | < plant height | |||||
(1). The numbers in this column indicate the different experiments performed in the study. (2). Experiments were categorized as follows: germination, hydroponics and soil cultures. The time plants were exposed to the toxin is expressed in days. (3). Unless otherwise stated, the source of toxin is natural or cultured cyanobacterial bloom material. Microcystin variants reported are those identified and quantified by the authors. The abbreviation “MCs” is used when no information is available concerning the chemical variants present in toxic material. Other contaminants, or specific treatment conditions investigated in combination with the toxin, are also indicated. (4). Concentration of MCs causing the effect (5). Main morphological and physiological parameters measured in the study.