| Literature DB >> 34871690 |
Natasha Natasha1, Muhammad Shahid2, Irshad Bibi3, Jibran Iqbal4, Sana Khalid1, Behzad Murtaza1, Hafiz Faiq Bakhat1, Abu Bakr Umer Farooq1, Muhammad Amjad1, Hafiz Mohkum Hammad5, Nabeel Khan Niazi3, Muhammad Arshad6.
Abstract
Zinc (Zn) plays an important role in the physiology and biochemistry of plants due to its established essentiality and toxicity for living beings at certain Zn concentration i.e., deficient or toxic over the optimum range. Being a vital cofactor of important enzymes, Zn participates in plant metabolic processes therefore, alters the biophysicochemical processes mediated by Zn-related enzymes/proteins. Excess Zn can provoke oxidative damage by enhancing the levels of reactive radicals. Hence, it is imperative to monitor Zn levels and associated biophysicochemical roles, essential or toxic, in the soil-plant interactions. This data-analysis review has critically summarized the recent literature of (i) Zn mobility/phytoavailability in soil (ii) molecular understanding of Zn phytouptake, (iii) uptake and distribution in the plants, (iv) essential roles in plants, (v) phyto-deficiency and phytotoxicity, (vi) detoxification processes to scavenge Zn phytotoxicity inside plants, and (vii) associated health hazards. The review especially compares the essential, deficient and toxic roles of Zn in biophysicochemical and detoxification processes inside the plants. To conclude, this review recommends some Zn-related research perspectives. Overall, this review reveals a thorough representation of Zn bio-geo-physicochemical interactions in soil-plant system using recent data.Entities:
Keywords: Antioxidants; Biofortification; Deficiency; Enzyme co-factor; Essentiality; Hormetic effect; Optimum levels; Oxidative burst; Phytotoxicity; Redox homeostasis; Risk hazards; Stress response; Zinc
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34871690 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.152024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963