| Literature DB >> 34768875 |
Md Najmol Hoque1, Md Tahjib-Ul-Arif2, Afsana Hannan3, Naima Sultana3, Shirin Akhter3, Md Hasanuzzaman4, Fahmida Akter5, Md Sazzad Hossain6, Md Abu Sayed7, Md Toufiq Hasan8, Milan Skalicky9, Xiangnan Li10, Marián Brestič9,11.
Abstract
Heavy metal toxicity is one of the most devastating abiotic stresses. Heavy metals cause serious damage to plant growth and productivity, which is a major problem for sustainable agriculture. It adversely affects plant molecular physiology and biochemistry by generating osmotic stress, ionic imbalance, oxidative stress, membrane disorganization, cellular toxicity, and metabolic homeostasis. To improve and stimulate plant tolerance to heavy metal stress, the application of biostimulants can be an effective approach without threatening the ecosystem. Melatonin (N-acetyl-5-methoxytryptamine), a biostimulator, plant growth regulator, and antioxidant, promotes plant tolerance to heavy metal stress by improving redox and nutrient homeostasis, osmotic balance, and primary and secondary metabolism. It is important to perceive the complete and detailed regulatory mechanisms of exogenous and endogenous melatonin-mediated heavy metal-toxicity mitigation in plants to identify potential research gaps that should be addressed in the future. This review provides a novel insight to understand the multifunctional role of melatonin in reducing heavy metal stress and the underlying molecular mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: abiotic stress; heavy metal; oxidative stress; phytomelatonin; plant growth
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34768875 PMCID: PMC8584185 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222111445
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1A simplified overview of the pathway demonstrating the negative effects of HMs on plants. ROS, reactive oxygen species; RNS, reactive nitrogen species; RCS, reactive carbonyl species; PS-I, photosystem-I; PS-II, photosystem-II.
Effects of HMs on the levels of endogenous melatonin accumulation in plants.
| HMs | Plant Species | Exposed Organs | Concentration (µM) | Exposure Duration | MT Level | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Al |
| Root | 50 | 24 h | ↑ | [ |
| Al |
| Leaves | 100 | 15 days | ↑ | [ |
| Al |
| Seedlings | 500 | 72 h | ↓ | [ |
| Cd |
| Root | 50, 100, and 200 | 15 h | ↑ | [ |
| Cd |
| Root | 100 | 15 days | ↑ | [ |
| Cd |
| Leaves | 100 | 15 days | ↑ | [ |
| Cd |
| Leaves | 500 | 15 days | ↑ | [ |
| Cd |
| Leaves | 300 | 24 h | ↑ | [ |
| Cd |
| Seedlings | 500 | 72 h | ↑ | [ |
| Zn |
| Root | 100 | 15 h | ↑ | [ |
| Zn |
| Root | 100 | 72 h | ↑ | [ |
| Zn |
| Root | 100 | 24 h | ↑ | [ |
↑ (increase), ↓ (decrease), h (hour).
Role of exogenous melatonin in plants exposed to various HM stress.
| Plant Species | HM (conc.) | MT Doses | Observed Effects of MT on Plant Systems | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Increase | Decrease | ||||
|
| Al (50 µM) | 50, 100, 200, and 400 µmol L−1 | SOD, POD, and CAT activity; | MDA content. | [ |
|
| 0.1, 1, 10, 100, | CAT, SOD, and POD activity; exudation of malate and citrate; gene encoding | H2O2 content. | [ | |
|
| As (25 µM) | 250 mM | GSH, PCs content; dry matter production. | Oxidative stress; H2O2 and MDA content. | [ |
|
| As (75 mg kg−1 soil) | 25, 50, 100, and 200 µM | SOD, POD, and CAT secondary metabolites (AsA, phenols, flavanoids); chloroplast ultrastructure; Chl pigment, essential ions, essential oil, stability, the cell membrane integrity; growth. | H2O2 and MDA content. | [ |
|
| Cd (10 and 50 µM) | 10 and 50 µM | SOD and POD activity; plant biomass including both underground and above-ground areas. | Accumulation of Cd; transcription of Cd uptake and transport-related genes. | [ |
|
| Cd (50, 100, and 200 µM) | 10, 50, and 200 µM | Cd tolerance; microRNA-mediated redox homeostasis. | Accumulation of Cd and ROS; oxidative damage. | [ |
|
| Cd (10, 50, 100, and 200 µM) | 25, 50, 100, and 250 µM | APX, CAT, and POD content; promotion of cell wall or vacuolar sequestration of Cd; plant growth. | Expression of Cd uptake-related genes ( | [ |
|
| Cd (30 µM) | 0 and 100 µM | Photosynthesis, photosynthetic pigments; transcriptionally regulated key genes involved in detoxification; plant biomass. | Cd-induced reductions in growth; ROS and MDA. | [ |
|
| Cd (100 µM) | 150 µmol L−1 | LA; photosynthetic rate; Chl content; stomatal conductance; transpiration rate. | Growth inhibition; excess Cd poisoning. | [ |
|
| 100 µM | APX, POD, and CAT activity; redox homeostasis; S metabolism, and biosynthesis of downstream S metabolites; H+-ATPase activity; GSH and PCs; plant growth. | Oxidative stress. | [ | |
|
| Cd (10 mg L−1) | 50 µM | SOD, POD, and CAT activity; biomass of | Seedlings growth inhibition | [ |
|
| Cd-As (25, 75, and 125 ppm) | 100 µM | SOD, POD, and CAT activity; fresh and dry weight. | Chl damage; lipid peroxidation. | [ |
| Zn-Cd (3 g L−1 and 15 mg L−1) | 1 µM | POD and CAT activity; SP content. | MDA content; oxidative stress. | [ | |
|
| Cr (50 and 100 µM) | 0, 1, 5, and 10 µM | SOD, POD, APX, and CAT activity; photosynthesis rate; photosystem II efficiency; | Cr accumulation; ROS accumulation. | [ |
|
| Cu (300 µM) | 10, 50, 100, 300, 500, and 800 µmol L−1 | SOD, POD, and CAT activity; GSH which chelates excess Cu2+; redox-related gene expression; cell-wall-related gene expression. | ROS production. | [ |
|
| Cu (80 µM) | 10 nmol L−1 | SOD, APX, POD, and GR activity; GSH and PC content; Cu2+ sequestration; carbon metabolism (glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway); cell wall trapping; plant fresh weight. | Cu2+ toxicity and ROS production. | [ |
|
| Cu (10–100 µM) | 0.1–100 µM | Plant biomass; photosynthetic pigments; efficiency of photosynthetic apparatus; proline content. | Oxidative stress. | [ |
|
| Fe (0.1 mM) | 100 µM | POD, SOD, and CAT activity; Chl content; active Fe2+ and K+ content; endogenous NO and H2S; total biomass; fruit yield of plants. | H2O2 and MDA content. | [ |
|
| Fe (3 and 90 mg L−1) | 100 µM | Endogenous MT content; SOD, POD, and CAT activity; phenols and flavonoids contents; phenylalanine ammonia lyase, polyphenol oxidase activity; photosynthetic pigment and rate; plant growth and biomass. | ROS production and Fe acquisition. | [ |
|
| Ni (50 µM) | 100 µM | APX, CAT, SOD, POD and GR activity; redox balance; Chl-synthesis-related genes; photosynthesis rate; phenols, flavonoids, and anthocyanin content; nutrient homeostasis; biomass production. | ROS accumulation. | [ |
|
| Pb (0.1 mM) | 0.05 and 0.10 mM | SOD, POD, and CAT activity; nutrient element content; plant growth. | Oxidative stress; H2O2 and MDA content; electrolyte leakage. | [ |
|
| Pb (50 µM) | 0–300 µM | APX, CAT, SOD, and POD activity; glyoxalase (Gly I and Gly II); Chl and PC content; biomass production of roots, stems and leaves. | Pb stress. | [ |
|
| Pb (15 µM) | 200 nM | Pb stress tolerance. | Programmed cell death; ROS content; DNA fragmentation. | [ |
|
| Pb (1000 and 2000 mg kg−1 soil) | 0, 5, 20, and 100 µM | SOD, CAT, POD, APX, and GR activity; non-enzymatic antioxidant (AsA and GSH) content; water status; photosynthetic pigments; biomass production. | ROS content; membrane lipid peroxidation and permeability. | [ |
SOD, superoxide dismutase; CAT, catalase; POD, peroxidase; APX, ascorbate peroxidase, GR, glutathione reductase; GSH, glutathione; GSSG, oxidized glutathione; SP, soluble protein; RWC, relative water content; LA, leaf area; PC, phytochelatin, AsA, ascorbic acid; LOX, lipoxygenase; TPC, total phenolic compounds; NPT, non-protein thiols; MDA, malondialdehyde; TSS, total soluble sugars.
Figure 2Diagram showing mechanism of MT-mediated (A) reactive species detoxification, (B) protection against metabolic imbalance, and (C) maintenance of osmotic balance under HM stress conditions. (A) ROS: reactive oxygen species, RNS: reactive nitrogen species, O2•–: superoxide anion, H2O2: hydrogen peroxide, 1O2: singlet oxygen, •OH: hydroxyl radical, •NO: nitric oxide, ONOO•: peroxynitrite, •NO2: nitrogen dioxide, SOD: superoxide dismutase, CAT: catalase, APX: ascorbate peroxidase, GPX: glutathione peroxidase, PRX: peroxiredoxin, GR: glutathione reductase, AsA: ascorbic acid, GSH: reduced glutathione, TDC: tryptophan decarboxylase, T5H: tryptamine 5-hydroxylase, SNAT: serotonin N-acetyltransferase, ASMT: acetylserotonin methyltransferase, COMT: caffeoyl-O-methyltransferase, NR: nitrate reductase, NOS-like enzyme: NO synthase. (B) CWI: cell wall invertase, TSC: total soluble carbohydrate, GS: glutamine synthetase. (C) GOx: glycolate oxidase, MDA: malondialdehyde, RWC: relative water content, WSS: water-soluble sugar, P5CS: Δ1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthetase, PDH: proline dehydrogenase, POD: peroxidase.
Figure 3Schematic diagram showing MT-mediated (A) maintenance of nutrient homeostasis, (B) improvement in secondary metabolism, (C) enhancement in photosynthesis in plants under different HM stresses. (A) ROS: reactive oxygen species, H+-ATPase: proton pump ATPase. (B) PAL: phenylalanine ammonia-lyase, CHS: chalcone synthase. (C) GOx: glycolate oxidase, CO2: carbon dioxide, Chl: chlorophyll, CA: carbonic anhydrase, δ-ALA: δ-aminolevulinic acid and δ-ALAD: δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase, Pro: proline, P5CS: Δ1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthetase activity, PDH: proline dehydrogenase, SOD: superoxide dismutase, CAT: catalase, APX: ascorbate peroxidase, GSH: reduced glutathione, GR: glutathione reductase, AsA: ascorbic acid.