| Literature DB >> 35563429 |
Anas Raklami1, Abdelilah Meddich2,3, Khalid Oufdou1, Marouane Baslam4.
Abstract
Rapid industrialization, mine tailings runoff, and agricultural activities are often detrimental to soil health and can distribute hazardous metal(loid)s into the soil environment, with harmful effects on human and ecosystem health. Plants and their associated microbes can be deployed to clean up and prevent environmental pollution. This green technology has emerged as one of the most attractive and acceptable practices for using natural processes to break down organic contaminants or accumulate and stabilize metal pollutants by acting as filters or traps. This review explores the interactions between plants, their associated microbiomes, and the environment, and discusses how they shape the assembly of plant-associated microbial communities and modulate metal(loid)s remediation. Here, we also overview microbe-heavy-metal(loid)s interactions and discuss microbial bioremediation and plants with advanced phytoremediation properties approaches that have been successfully used, as well as their associated biological processes. We conclude by providing insights into the underlying remediation strategies' mechanisms, key challenges, and future directions for the remediation of metal(loid)s-polluted agricultural soils with environmentally friendly techniques.Entities:
Keywords: bioremediation; contaminants; decontamination; heavy metals; mechanisms; phytoremediation techniques; plant-microbe association; uptake and translocation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35563429 PMCID: PMC9105715 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23095031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Maximum permissible limits of heavy metals and other pollutants in irrigation water, soils, and vegetables [47].
| Chemical Element (Contaminants) | Maximum Permissible Level in Irrigation Water (µg/mL) | Maximum Permissible Level in the Soil | Maximum Permissible Level in Vegetables (µg/g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| As | 0.001 | 20 | - |
| Cd | 0.0003 | 0.8 | 0.10 |
| Co | 0.05 | 50 | 50 |
| Cr | 0.55 | 100 | - |
| Cu | 0.017 | 36 | - |
| Fe | 0.02 | 50,000 | 425 |
| Mn | 0.04 | 2000 | 500 |
| Ni | 0.002 | 35 | 67 |
| Pb | 0.001 | 85 | 0.30 |
| Se | 0.02 | 10 | - |
| Zn | 0.20 | 50 | 100 |
Figure 1Main phytoremediation techniques for the remediation of contaminated environments. HM: Heavy metal.
Figure 2Schematic representation of various mechanisms involved in plant metal detoxification. ZIP, LCT1, and CTR1: metal transporters at the plasma membrane; HMA2/4: metal transporters; TgMTP and HMT: metal transporters at the tonoplast; Me2+: bivalent metals; ROS: reactive oxygen species; H2O2: hydrogen peroxide; SOD: superoxide dismutase; CAT: catalase; APX: ascorbate peroxidase; ASA: ascorbic acid; GLU: glutathione; T-SH: protein thiols; PCS: phytochelatin synthase; GS: glutathione synthetase; GCS: γ-glutamylcysteine synthetase; APS: adenosine 5’-phosphosulfate; Cys: cysteine; Glu: glutamate; GSH: glutathione; MT: metallothionein; LMW: low molecular weight; HMW: high molecular weight.
Microorganism-assisted phytoremediation of heavy metal (HM)-contaminated media.
| Microbial Species | PGP Features | Plant | HMs | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IAA, Biofilm, |
| Cu, Zn, Pb |
Inoculation improved plant growth and proline content Microbial inoculation decreased HM uptake. | [ | |
| IAA, ACCD, Zeatin, GA, P solubilization |
| As, Cr |
Inoculation increased germination traits, photosynthetic pigments, shoot and root tolerance indexes, FW and DM, leaf length, root and cob | [ | |
| IAA, Biofilm, |
| Cu, Zn, Pb |
Inoculation alleviated metal stress, improved growth, lowered antioxidant enzymes’ levels, and increased physiological parameters. Inoculation reduced the above-ground HMs. | [ | |
|
| ACCD, IAA, Gibberellins |
| Cd, Pb |
Inoculated plants modulated metal-induced oxidative stress by inhibiting metal transport and decreasing electrolyte leakage and lipid peroxidation. Inoculation actively absorbed HMs and decreased their content in soil and plants. | [ |
|
| n/s |
| Cd |
Single and combined inoculation improved alfalfa resistance to Cd stress. Inoculation improved Cd tolerance via antioxidant enzyme activity increases | [ |
|
| n/s |
| Zn, Pb, Cd, Cu |
Shoot and root DM and Chl content were improved after inoculation Inoculation improved β-glucosidase, alkaline phosphatase, and urease activity in the soil and decreased antioxidant activity (POD, PAL, PPO) in plants. Uptake of Zn (45%) and Cd (22%) was reduced, while that of Pb (17%) and Cu (47%) was increased. | [ |
| IAA, hydrolytic and ligninolytic enzymes, Siderophores |
| Fe, Cu, Zn, Cd, Mn, Ni, Pb, As |
In situ phytoremediation assisted by bacterial inoculation reduced HMs’ contents | [ | |
|
| IAA, ACCD, EPS, siderophore, |
| As |
Inoculation increased growth, plant number per pot, and Chl and Caros content. Inoculation decreased ROS production. As uptake in plant tissues was reduced by inoculation. | [ |
| phosphatase production, |
| Cd |
| [ | |
| ACCD, IAA, |
| Cd |
The four PGPBs enhanced shoot biomass production, soil and plant analyzer development value, and Cd uptake and translocation to the leaves. | [ | |
| IAA, ACCD, siderophores | Ni, Cu, Co, Mn, Fe |
Single or dual inoculation was efficient in promoting Inoculation stimulated root length, shoot biomass, and Ni uptake in Arabidopsis. | [ | ||
|
| n/s |
| Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Mn, Ni, Pb |
Inoculation improved seed germination, FW, plant height, chlorophyll, flag leaf area, and tiller number per plant. Inoculation decreased Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Mn, Ni, and Pb accumulation in wheat | [ |
|
| IAA, siderophores |
| Cd, Cu, Ni, Pb, Zn |
Inoculation enhanced the biomass, pigments, phenols, protein, and antioxidants. Inoculation increased the translocation of HMs, except for Ni. | [ |
|
| P solubilization, N fixation, siderophores |
| As |
| [ |
|
| IAA, arginine decarboxylase, siderophores | Cd |
Inoculation increased biomass, soluble proteins, and vitamin C content. Inoculation decreased the edible tissue Cd and Pb content Strain increased the OM content and invertase activity of the rhizospheric soils. | [ | |
|
| n/s |
| Cd, Fe, Zn |
Single or combined inoculation enhanced plant growth. Inoculation increased Fe, Zn, and Cd uptake by plants. Bacterial inoculation increased Cd uptake in the shoot by 30% Bacterial inoculation increased the total biomass by 25%. | [ |
| P solubilization, |
| Cd |
Bacterial strains increased plant growth and biomass in Cd-contaminated soil. Cd uptake increased in plant tissues upon bacterial inoculation. | [ | |
| IAA, HCN, siderophores, |
| Cd |
Inoculation improved plant growth traits (shoot DM, height, and leaf area). Bacterial inoculation increased Cd uptake by 90%. Mycorrhizal inoculation increased Cd uptake by 24%. | [ | |
| ACCD, IAA Siderophore |
| Zn, Pb |
Inoculation reduced Zn and Pb uptake by plant tissues. | [ | |
|
| NH3, HCN, IAA, ACCD |
| Cd, Zn, Cu |
| [ |
|
| Siderophore |
| Al, Cu, Fe, Pb, Zn |
Inoculation reduced HM uptake and promoted seedling growth and Al tolerance via inducing chlorogenic-acid and oosporein production. | [ |
|
| n/s |
| As |
Microbial consortium of Consortium reduced As accumulation and improved the mineral nutrient in rice. | [ |
|
| IAA, |
| As |
Yeast inoculation improved plant growth, total Chl, sugar, and proline. Inoculation improved plant detoxification through ROS scavenging, Rice– | [ |
|
| n/s |
| Cu, Pb, Zn |
AMF inoculum promoted soybean growth and seed yield. Inoculation increased HMs’ retention in roots, and reduced shoot translocation of Cu (22%), Pb (58%), and Zn (67%). | [ |
|
| n/s |
| Pb, Zn, Cd |
AMF inoculation increased soil pH and P, S, and HMs’ uptake by Bermuda grass, and decreased available Pb and Zn in soils and Pb in shoots. | [ |
|
| n/s |
| Cd |
AMF inoculation promoted plant growth and contents of N and P in plant shoots AMF reduced Cd uptake in plant tissues. | [ |
|
| n/s |
| Cd |
Colonization enhanced soil acid phosphatase activity, P uptake, and growth. Inoculation improved the total Cd uptake in all plant tissues. | [ |
|
| P solubilization |
| Co, Pb, Zn |
Inoculation enhanced plant growth under HM-contaminated soils. Improvement of Co, Pb, and Zn phytoextraction by inoculation. Inoculation improved Co (51%), Pb (20%), and Zn (76%) bioavailability. | [ |
| IAA, EPS, NH3
|
| Cd, Cu, Pb |
Inoculation promoted plant growth under HM stress. | [ | |
| IAA, EPS siderophores |
| As |
Inoculation promoted plant growth (shoot and root length and weight). As uptake by shoot and root was decreased. | [ | |
| n/s |
| Cr, Fe, Al, Zn |
Cyanobacteria increased plant growth, Chl a, and N content. Decreased the HMs’ extractable fraction and their accumulation in plant tissues. | [ | |
| n/s | Fe, As, Pb, Cr, Ni |
Inoculation into polluted soil increased root and hypocotyl lengths and vigor index due to high nutrient content and less HMs’ bioavailability. | [ | ||
|
| IAA, gibberellins, |
| Al, Ni, and Cd |
Inoculation promoted plant growth attributes, photosynthetic activity, macronutrient uptake, glutathione, CAT, and SOD activities, and decreased MDA. Inoculation reduced metal accumulation and translocation in plants by downregulating HMs’ ATPase gene expression. | [ |
|
| ACCD, N fixation, |
| As, Cu, Pb, Zn, Cd |
Inoculation decreased antioxidant enzymes vs. non-exposed plants. Inoculation induced the expression of phenylalanine ammonium lyase. | [ |
| IAA, ACCD, siderophores |
| Cr, Cu, Fe, Ni, Pb, Ba, Cd, Co |
Bacteria enhanced | [ | |
|
| IAA adsorption |
| Cd |
Inoculation facilitated plant growth in the presence of Cd. Inoculation increased Cd uptake in the stem and root of Bermuda grass. | [ |
|
| n/s |
| As |
Fungal colonization accumulated and immobilized As in the roots vs. aerial parts. | [ |
|
| n/s |
| Cd |
Colonized roots promoted plant growth. Inoculation increased Cd accumulation in plants. | [ |
| P solubilization |
| Ni, Cd, Pb, Co, Cu, Fe, Zn |
PGPR increased the maize plant’s root and shoot weight, root length, shoot height, leaf area, proline, chlorophyll, and carotenoid content. PGPR induced Ni, Pb, Co, Fe, Cu, and Zn accumulation in maize shoot. | [ | |
|
| IAA, HCN, NH3, ACCD siderophore, |
| Cu, Cr, Cd |
Inoculated wheat had better growth and yields under Cu, Cd, and Cr stresses. Bioinoculant enhanced spikes, grain, and straw by 25%, 17%, and 12%, respectively. Inoculation declined antioxidants and HMs’ uptake. | [ |
| n/s |
| As |
Co-inoculation with | [ | |
|
| IAA, ACCD, siderophore |
| Cd |
Inoculation increased plant biomass, Cd, chlorophyll, and enzymes’ activity. Inoculation improved the relative expression of | [ |
|
| n/s |
| Pb |
Inoculation with Pb-tolerant PGPR strain immobilized Pb in soil and alleviated its harmful impacts on plant growth Inoculation reduced Pb concentration in the roots and shoots. | [ |
| ACCD, IAA, |
| Ni |
Single inoculation or combined enhanced plant growth, physiological status (e.g., electrolyte leakage, chlorophyll, proline, and MDA), and Ni accumulation. | [ | |
| IAA, EPS, HCN P solubilization, N fixation, siderophores |
| Cr |
Inoculation improved shoot (98%) and root (95%) DM. Inoculation increased Chl content and decreased stress markers. Inoculation decreased Cr content in the root. | [ | |
| Organic acids, ACCD, IAA, Acetoin, P solubilization, N fixation |
| Cd and Zn |
Inoculation significantly enhanced the growth of Inoculation decreased the content of Zn and Cd in the shoot and the root. | [ | |
| n/s |
| Pb |
Microbial inoculation increased shoot DM and Pb accumulation. Bacterial inoculation enhanced shoot Pb concentration. AMF increased plant biomass and plant Pb accumulation. | [ | |
| P solubilization |
| Fe |
Bacterial and/or AMF inoculation enhanced plant growth and increased the extent of Fe absorption and phytoremediation efficiency. | [ | |
|
| n/s |
| As |
Mycorrhizal plants displayed better growth and less oxidative stress. AMF increased As accumulation and reduced As translocation to grain. Colonization of AMF resulted in higher antioxidant enzymes’ activities. | [ |
| n/s |
| Cd, Cr, Ni, Pb, Fe, Zn, Cr, Mn |
AMF significantly influenced plant growth and phytoremediation potential. AMF improved proline, chlorophyll content, and P content of shoot and root. AMF inoculation improved the soil enzymes’ activity (dehydrogenase, β-Glucosidase, acid, and alkaline phosphatase). | [ | |
|
| n/s |
| Cd |
Inoculation enhanced biomass production and reduced Cd in shoots and roots. AMF increased GSH and PCs contents in shoots and roots. | [ |
|
| n/s |
| Zn, Cd |
Inoculation improved plant growth, pigments, and gs AMF reduced Zn and Cd uptake in plant tissues. | [ |
|
| IAA production |
| Cd, Zn |
Inoculation reduced Cd (31%) and Zn (100%) exchangeable phases in soil. Cd levels were reduced in wheat leaf (62%) and root (47%). | [ |
| IAA production, |
| Cu, Zn, Ni, Pb, As |
Inoculation promoted plant height (40%) and root length (100%). Inoculation enhanced Cu, Ni, Zn, Pb, and As rhizoaccumulation. | [ | |
|
| n/s |
| Pb and Cd |
Inoculation enhanced the phytoextraction of Cd and Pb by | [ |
|
| IAA, HCN, ACCD |
| Cd |
Inoculated alfalfa showed higher biomass and nutrient uptake. Inoculation increased Cd uptake by alfalfa roots. | [ |
|
| n/s |
| Cd |
Microbial priming improved plant growth, photosynthetic electron flows, and non-photochemical quenching in Cd-exposed maize plants. Cd translocation from root to shoot was significantly restricted. | [ |
|
| n/s |
| Pb |
Inoculated plants had higher biomass, height, and root and tiller number. Higher CAT, SOD, and POX activities in inoculated plants under Pb stress. Inoculation increased Pb uptake and its phytoremediation. | [ |
| n/s |
| Cd, Pb, Cu, Zn |
Applying Co-inoculation improved microbial community, enzymes’ activity, and growth. Co-inoculation altered Cd, Cu, Pb, and Zn fractions, bioavailability, and phytoextraction. | [ | |
|
| Gibberellic acid |
| Cd, Ni, Cu, Zn |
Inoculation with Inoculation reduced Cd, Ni, Cu, and Zn in the growth media, shoot, and root. | [ |
|
| n/s |
| Pb |
Fungal inoculation increased plant growth (+24%) and total chlorophyll (+18%). Inoculation increased Pb uptake by plant tissues. | [ |
|
| n/s |
| Pb |
Inoculation decreased Pb accumulation by plant tissues. | [ |
| n/s | Cd, Zn, Fe, Mn |
Inoculation increased plant biomass. Inoculation decreased shoot Cd and increased seed Cd concentration of Inoculation increased Ca, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, N, P, S, and Zn accumulation under Cd-treated pea plants. | [ |
n/s: not specified. ACCD: 1-Aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid deaminase, APX: ascorbate peroxidase, caros: carotenoids, CAT: catalase, Chl: chlorophylls, DM: dry matter, EPS: exopolysaccharides, FW: fresh weight, HCN: hydrogen cyanide, GA: Gibberellic acid, GPX: Glutathione peroxidase, GR: Glutathione reductase, gs: stomatal conductance, IAA: Indole-3-acetic acid, n/s: not specified, GSH: glutathione, PCs: phytochelatins, MDA: Malondialdehyde, PAL: Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase, POX or POD: peroxidase, PPO: polyphenol oxidase, RDM: root DM, RFW: root FW, ROS: Reactive oxygen species, RWC: relative water content, SDM: shoot DM, SFW: shoot FW, SOD: superoxide dismutase, AMF: arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi.
Figure 3Microbial-assisted phytoremediation for heavy metal decontamination of polluted soils.
Figure 4Schematic representation of various mechanisms involved in microbial remediation of HM-contaminated soil. HMs: Heavy metals; SD: Siderophores; EPS: Extracellular polymeric substances; BS: Biosurfactants.
List of some microorganisms used for microbial remediation.
| Group | Bioremediation | Metal | Metal Concentration (mg/L) | Remediation Efficiency (%) | Mechanism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bacteria |
| As, Cd, Zn | 182, 20, 983 | 53, 90, 80 | Biosurfactant production | [ |
|
| Pb, Cd, Ni, Co, Cr | 100, 100, 250, 200, 100 | n/s | Adsorption in exopolysaccharides | [ | |
|
| Pb, Cd, Ni, Co, Cr | 100, 250, 250, 150, 150 | n/s | Adsorption in exopolysaccharides | [ | |
|
| Cr, Fe, Mn, Ni, Cu, Cd, Zn | 100, 100, 50, 50, 30, 30, 50 | 82, 92, 97, 43, 25, 31, 36 | Reduction (for Cr) | [ | |
|
| As | 500 | 98 | Precipitation | [ | |
|
| Hg, Cd | 500 | 30, 76 | Biosrption | [ | |
|
| Pb, Cd, Cr | 100 | 69, 54, 43 | Biosurfactant production | [ | |
| Pb, Hg, Mn, Cd | 1000 | 76, 98, 90, 100 | Biosurfactant production | [ | ||
|
| Al, Cd, Cu, Fe, Pb, Mn, Zn | n/s | 87, 40, 19, 34, 57, 25, 49 | Biosurfactant production | [ | |
|
| Cd, Ni, Cr | 100 | 100, 98, 74 | Sulfate-reduction | [ | |
|
| Cr, Cu, Cd, Ni, Zn, Pb | 150 | 80, 81, 80, 82, 80, 80 | Bioaccumulation and biosorption | [ | |
| Cr | 16 | 87 | Reduction | [ | ||
|
| Cd | 100 | 70 | Adsorption and/or precipitation | [ | |
|
| Pb | 100 | 88 | Adsorption and/or precipitation | [ | |
|
| Pb | 100 | 87 | Adsorption and/or precipitation | [ | |
|
| Cd, Pb | 100 | 76 | Adsorption and/or precipitation | [ | |
|
| Pb | 100 | 79.26 | Bioaccumulation and biosorption | [ | |
|
| Cr | 1110 | 71 | Reduction | [ | |
|
| Pb, Cu, Zn | 1000 | 98, 75, 62 | Adsorption in exopolysaccharides | [ | |
|
| Hg | 100 | 73 | - | [ | |
|
| Cr | 570 | 100 | Reduction | [ | |
|
| Cr | 570 | 100 | Reduction | [ | |
|
| Pb | 100 | 99.19 | Bioaccumulation and biosorption | [ | |
| Cr | 300 | 63 | Reduction | [ | ||
|
| Cr, Cu, Ni | 200 | 56, 79, 90 | - | [ | |
| Cr, Ni | 100, 50 | 90, 55 | Biosrption | [ | ||
|
| Cd, Pb | 435, 905 | 92, 88 | Biosurfactant production | [ | |
|
| Cr | 100 | 100 | Reduction | [ | |
| Zn | 65.38, 32.69 | 36 or 43 | Bioaccumulation or biosorption | [ | ||
| Yeast |
| Pb, Cd | 25, 80 | 71, 77 | Biosorption | [ |
|
| Hg, Cd | 500 | 19, 70 | Biosorption | [ | |
|
| Cr, Pb, Zn, Cu, Cd | 70 | 23, 10, 7, 5, 16 | Biosurfactant production | [ | |
|
| Cd | 100 | 78 | Biosorption | [ | |
|
| Hg | 100 | 80 | - | [ | |
|
| Cr | 570 | 96 | Reduction | [ | |
|
| Fe, Zn, Pb | 1877, 1470, 3038 | 89, 87, 70 | Biosurfactant production | [ | |
| Zn | 100 | 85 | Biosurfactant production | [ | ||
|
| Cr | 200 | 27 | Reduction | [ | |
| Fungi |
| Cd, Cr | 0.6, 0.4 | 79, 48 | Bioaccumulation | [ |
|
| Cd, Cr | 0.6, 0.4 | 76, 35 | Bioaccumulation | [ | |
|
| Cd, Cr | 0.6, 0.4 | 75, 35 | Bioaccumulation | [ | |
| As | 10 | 32 | Reduction and volatilization | [ | ||
|
| Cd, Pb | 400, 2000 | 88, 58 | Biosorption | [ | |
| Cr, Ni | 100, 50 | 92, 9 | Biosorption | [ | ||
|
| Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb, Zn | 1000 | 87, 83, 96, 92, 87, 70 | Biosorption | [ | |
|
| Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb, Zn | 1000 | 66, 57, 90, 77, 82, 7 | Biosorption | [ | |
|
| Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb, Zn | 1000 | 53, 32, 90, 69, 77, 84 | Biosorption | [ | |
|
| Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb, Zn | 1000 | 61,77, 64, 72, 44, 87 | Biosorption | [ | |
|
| Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb, Zn | 1000 | 95, 90, 77, 89, 57, 93 | Biosorption | [ | |
|
| Ni | 30 | 70.3 | Biosorption | [ | |
|
| Cr, Ni, Cu | 50 | 100, 30, 29 | Bioaccumulation | [ | |
|
| Cd, Ni | 25, 16 | 96, 89 | Bioaccumulation | [ | |
| Cyanobacteria |
| Cr, Fe, Ni, Zn, Cu | 2.5, 2, 0.5, 0.5, 0.5 | n/s | Bioaccumulation | [ |
|
| Cu | 5 | 83 | Biosorption | [ | |
|
| Pb | 15 | 71.4 | Biosorption and/or bioaccumulation | [ | |
|
| Pb | 15 | 97.8 | Biosorption and/or bioaccumulation | [ | |
| Cr | 5 | 94 | Reduction and biosorption | [ | ||
|
| Cd | 1.5 | 45.45 | Biosorption and bioaccumulation | [ | |
|
| Cd | 1.5 | 57.14 | Biosorption and bioaccumulation | [ | |
| Cr | 10 | 93 | Biosorption | [ | ||
| Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Se, Zn | 5 | 98, 90, 100, 100, 98, 81 | Biosorption and/or bioaccumulation | [ | ||
|
| Cr, Fe, Ni, Zn | 10, 5, 2, 2 | n/s | Bioaccumulation | [ | |
| Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Se, Zn | 5 | 98, 81, 99, 100, 99, 79 | Biosorption and/or bioaccumulation | [ |
n/s: Not specified.