| Literature DB >> 36015464 |
Ildikó Jócsák1, Bence Knolmajer2, Miklós Szarvas1, Gyula Rabnecz3, Ferenc Pál-Fám1.
Abstract
Heavy metals (HMs) are among the most important toxic agents since they reach the soil through various routes and accumulate in the food chain. Therefore, HMs induce problems in soil integrity and in plant, animal, and human health. Alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) is a significant crop worldwide, utilized in animal production. Furthermore, because of its nitrogen-absorbing ability via symbiotic strains of bacteria, it increases soil productivity. However, there are relatively few studies investigating the effects of HMs and their alleviation possibilities on alfalfa plants. Therefore, the goal of this review is to clarify the current state of research into HM-induced alterations in alfalfa and to determine the extent to which externally applied microorganisms and chemical compounds can mitigate the negative effects. The aim is to indicate areas of development towards further understanding of HM detoxification in alfalfa and to identify future research directions.Entities:
Keywords: alfalfa; exogenously applied agents; heavy metal stress; stress alleviation
Year: 2022 PMID: 36015464 PMCID: PMC9414348 DOI: 10.3390/plants11162161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1Anthropogenic and natural sources of heavy metals in the environment.
Figure 2Mode of action of essential and non-essential heavy metals.
Figure 3Effects of essential and non-essential heavy metals on alfalfa.
Plant part, applied heavy metal and concentration, affected physiological processes, accumulation in the plant, and the duration of treatment of HM-treated alfalfa plants.
| Plant Part | Applied Heavy Metal and Concentration | Affected Physiological Processes | Accumulation in Plant | Duration of Treatment | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whole plant | Mo |
decreased dry weight | 346 ppm | 21 days | [ |
| Whole plant | Mn: 60 mg L−1 |
reduced dry weight by 20% | n.a. | 36 days | [ |
| Seed | Zn: 1.5–24 mM |
reduced germination rate | Zn: root: 490 mg kg−1; shoot: 180 mg kg−1 | 24 h | [ |
| Roots | Zn: 0.038–50 µM |
poor root development | Zn: 2700 mg kg−1 DW | 14 days | [ |
| Roots | Mn |
browning roots disrupted nutrient uptake | 30–500 mg kg−1 DW | n.a. | [ |
| Roots | Hg:10 μM |
strong inhibition of APX and GR induced lipid oxidation | n.a. | 0; 6; 12; 24; 48; 72 h | [ |
| Roots | Mn: 500 µg g−1 |
decreased the growth of roots and shoots | 1822 µg g−1 DW | 49 days | [ |
| Roots | Ni: 0; 50; 150; 250; 500 mg kg−1 |
increased POX, GST activities, increased MDA level up-regulated Prx1C, GST and PC genes | 0.61; 1.96; 9.97; 11.68; 23.65 mg kg−1 DW respectively | 60 days | [ |
| Roots | Cu |
constrained the reproduction of diazotroph bacteria (decrease N fixation) | n.a. | 2 years | [ |
| Roots | Cd: 3 and 5 mg kg−1 |
decreased root length and the uptake of K, Mg, Ca, Fe | 600; 850 mg kg−1 DW respectively | 7 days | [ |
| Roots | As: 25–35 μM |
nodulation decreased by 75% | n.a. | 3; 6; 10; 28 days | [ |
| Root | Cd: 1 mM |
decreased soluble proteins decreased enzymatic activity of CAT, APX, SOD enhanced electrolyte leakage, iron chelate reductase activity, total phytochelatin, citrate and malate levels increased H2O2 content up-regulated three Fe-related genes: MsIRT1, MsNramp1, MsFRO1 | root: 10 mg kg−1 DW | 7 days | [ |
| Root | Cd: 0–40 μM |
tolerant lines: increased cadmium content, increased dry weight tolerant lines: increased percentage of relative germination tolerant lines: reduced amount of hydrolyzed starch tolerant lines: lower level of lipid peroxidation and the loss of plasma membrane integrity tolerant lines: unchanged SOD activity tolerant lines: lower of H2O2 | 600–1700 mg kg−1 DW in tolerant cultivars and 600–1450 mg kg−1 DW in non-tolerant cultivars | 48; 72; 96 h | [ |
| Stem | Cu: at high availability in soil |
influence the cell wall properties (decreased quality) reduced level of ferritin, redox status of the cell | n.a. | [ | |
| Root, Shoots | Pb: 0; 10; 100 |
decreased GSH and hGSH levels increased the lipid peroxidation level, GR, APX, SOD activity and HSPs up-regulated APX and SOD genes | root: 766.66 mg kg−1 DW | 2 and 7 days | [ |
| Shoots | Ni: 50; 150; 250; 500 mg kg−1 |
increased POX, GST activities increased MDA level up-regulated Prx1C, GST and PCs genes | 1.58; 8.92; 22.64; 32.84; 75.2 | 60 days | [ |
| Shoots | Mn: 500 µg g−1 |
decreased growth of roots and shoots | 753 µg g−1 DW | 49 days | [ |
| Shoots | Cd: 3 and 5 mg kg−1 |
decreased shoot length | 600; 110 mg kg−1 DW respectively | 7 days | [ |
| Shoots | Cd: 1 mM |
decreased the level of total soluble proteins and enhanced electrolyte leakage, iron chelate reductase activity, total phytochelatin, citrate and malate levels decreased enzymatic activity of CAT, APX, SOD increase H2O2 content up-regulated three Fe-related genes (MsIRT1, MsNramp1, MsFRO1) | 1.4 mg kg−1 DW | 7 days | [ |
| Shoots | Cd: 0–40 μM |
tolerant lines: increased cadmium content, increased dry weight tolerant lines: increased percentage of relative germination tolerant lines: reduced amount of hydrolyzed starch tolerant lines: unchanged SOD activity tolerant cultivars: higher level of H2O2 | 25–31 mg kg−1 DW in tolerant and non-tolerant cultivars | 48; 72; 96 h | [ |
| Leaves | Cr: 0.05; 0.5; 1; 5; 10 mg L−1 |
reduced biomass, leaf size and amounts of photosynthetic pigments increased the level of lipid peroxidation, H2O2, NO, SOD and CAT activity, prolin content, P5CS enzyme activity, and expression of GST7, GST17, P5CS, P5CR MnSOD, FeSOD, Cu/ZnSOD, and CAT genes | 2.5; 2.8; 5; 8; 16 mg kg−1 DW | 59 days | [ |
| Root Cotyledon Leaves | Pb |
reduced growth, chlorosis and lowered the photosynthesis rate | Root: 25,500 mg L−1 DW | 50 days | [ |
| Leaves | Pb: 40 mg L−1 |
decreased CAT activity and increased TTA | n.a. | 10 days | [ |
| Leaves | Hg: 1; 5; 10; 20; 40 µM |
induced H2O2, O2−, and increased NADH-oxidase, LOX, APX, POD, CAT activity | n.a. | 0; 6; 12; 24; 48; 72 h | [ |
| Leaves | Zn: 4–7.3 mM |
chlorotic symptoms with necrotic spots | Zn: shoot: 300 mg kg−1 DW | 14 days | [ |
| Leaves | Mn |
interveinal chlorosis in young leaves necrotic spots in mature leaves generally triggered oxidative stress symptoms | n.a. | n.a. | [ |
Plant part, applied fungi and/or bacteria, affected physiological processes and the duration of treatment of HM-treated alfalfa plants.
| Plant Part | Applied Heavy Metal and Concentration | Applied Stress Alleviator | Affected Physiological Processes | Duration of Experiment | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| shoots and roots biomass | Cd 0.5, 5, and 20 mg kg−1 | growth, heavy metal uptake | 80 days | [ | |
| shoots and roots biomass | Cd 100 mg kg−1 | shoots and roots dry weight, gene expression in roots | 5 weeks | [ | |
| shoots and roots | Co 51.91 mg kg−1, | plant growth and nutrients take up | until early flowering | [ | |
| shoots and roots | Cd 0, 5, 10, mg kg−1 | plant growth, increase organic carbon level | 60 and 90 days | [ | |
| leaves, roots | Pb 0, 60, 120, 180 and 240 μm | plant growth, protein, carotenoid, pigments, proline and total phenol content, enzyme activities | 75 days | [ | |
| shoots and roots | Cd 20 mg kg−1 | four AMF species and biochar | growth, nutrient and cadmium uptake | 146 days | [ |
| shoots and roots | Cd | plant growth, Photosynthetic efficiency, water content and membrane permeability | two months | [ | |
| shoots and roots | Cu | plant growth, physiological state of the plants, nutrient composition of plants | two months | [ | |
| leaves, shoots and roots | Cr(VI) 100, 150, and 200 mg L−1 | Four PGP and Cr (IV) resistance bacterial isolates | chlorophyll, proline, hydrogen peroxide, malondialdehyde content | 5 weeks | [ |
Figure 4Single and combined application of AM fungi, bacteria, and organic substances, and their investigated effect on plant metabolism.
Figure 5Current status and developmental possibilities of HM alleviation investigations.