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The role of plant-associated bacteria in the mobilization and phytoextraction of trace elements in contaminated soils

TLDR
The role of plant-associated bacteria to enhance trace element availability in the rhizosphere is reviewed and the kind of bacteria typically found in association with trace element – tolerating or – accumulating plants are reported and discussed to improve trace element uptake by plants and thus the efficiency and rate of phytoextraction.
Abstract
Phytoextraction makes use of trace element-accumulating plants that concentrate the pollutants in their tissues. Pollutants can be then removed by harvesting plants. The success of phytoextraction depends on trace element availability to the roots and the ability of the plant to intercept, take up, and accumulate trace elements in shoots. Current phytoextraction practises either employ hyperaccumulators or fast-growing high biomass plants; the phytoextraction process may be enhanced by soil amendments that increase trace element availability in the soil. This review will focus on the role of plant-associated bacteria to enhance trace element availability in the rhizosphere. We report on the kind of bacteria typically found in association with trace element – tolerating or – accumulating plants and discuss how they can contribute to improve trace element uptake by plants and thus the efficiency and rate of phytoextraction. This enhanced trace element uptake can be attributed to a microbial modification of the absorptive properties of the roots such as increasing the root length and surface area and numbers of root hairs, or by increasing the plant availability of trace elements in the rhizosphere and the subsequent translocation to shoots via beneficial effects on plant growth, trace element complexation and alleviation of phytotoxicity. An analysis of data from literature shows that effects of bacterial inoculation on phytoextraction efficiency are currently inconsistent. Some key processes in plant–bacteria interactions and colonization by inoculated strains still need to be unravelled more in detail to allow full-scale application of bacteria assisted phytoremediation of trace element contaminated soils.

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Journal Article

Phytoremediation : 植物による環境/土壌浄化

TL;DR: This work found significant variation in Arabidopsis thaliana ecotypes in accumulation and tolerance of Pb, and screened ethyl methanesulfonate-mutagenized M2 populations and identified several Pb-accumulating mutants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trace elements in the soil-plant interface: Phytoavailability, translocation, and phytoremediation–A review

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of soil and plant indices related to trace element (TE) phytoavailability in real field conditions is presented, and discrepancies of lower-than-expected toxicity to plants are explored, mainly due to growth experiments that expose plants to TEs directly from TE-laden solutions or by studies that spike soils with TEs only days or weeks before planting.
Journal ArticleDOI

Use of plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPRs) with multiple plant growth promoting traits in stress agriculture: Action mechanisms and future prospects

TL;DR: Generally, ACC deaminase and IAA-producing bacteria can be a good option for optimal crop production and production of bio-fertilizers in the future due to having multiple potentials in alleviating stresses of salinity, drought, nutrient imbalance, and heavy metals toxicity in plants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bacterial mediated alleviation of heavy metal stress and decreased accumulation of metals in plant tissues: Mechanisms and future prospects.

TL;DR: This review provides information about the mechanisms possessed by heavy metal resistant-PGPRs that ameliorate heavy metal stress to plants and decrease the accumulation of these metals in plant, and gives some perspectives for research on these bacteria in agriculture in the future.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biochemical and Molecular Mechanisms of Plant-Microbe-Metal Interactions: Relevance for Phytoremediation.

TL;DR: This review presents the recent advances and applications made hitherto in understanding the biochemical and molecular mechanisms of plant–microbe interactions and their role in the major processes involved in phytoremediation, such as heavy metal detoxification, mobilization, immobilization, transformation, transport, and distribution.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Endophytic bacteria from seeds of nicotiana tabacum can reduce cadmium phytotoxicity

TL;DR: The beneficial effects of seed endophytes on metal toxicity and accumulation are demonstrated, and practical applications using inoculated seeds as a vector for plant beneficial bacteria are suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic diversity and characterization of heavy metal-resistant-endophytic bacteria from two copper-tolerant plant species on copper mine wasteland.

TL;DR: In experiments involving rape plants grown in vermiculite containing 4 mg kg(-1) of Cu, inoculation with the isolates was found to increase the dry weights of roots and above-ground tissues and increase inabove-ground tissue Cu content varied from 63% to 125% in inoculated-rape plants cultivated in Cu-contaminated substrate compared to the uninoculated control.
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Involvement of siderophores in the reduction of metal-induced inhibition of auxin synthesis in Streptomyces spp

TL;DR: It is concluded that siderophores promote auxin synthesis in the presence of Al(3+), Cd(2+), Cu(2+) and Ni(2%) by chelating these metals, which increases the plant growth-promoting effects of auxins, which in turn enhances the phytoremediation potential of plants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydroxamate siderophores produced by Streptomyces acidiscabies E13 bind nickel and promote growth in cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L.) under nickel stress.

TL;DR: It is concluded that hydroxamate siderophores contained in culture filtrates of S. acidiscabies E13 promoted cowpea growth under nickel contamination by binding iron and nickel, thus playing a dual role of sourcing iron for plant use and protecting against nickel toxicity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phytoremediation of arsenate contaminated soil by transgenic canola and the plant growth-promoting bacterium Enterobacter cloacae CAL2

TL;DR: In the presence of arsenate, in both the presence and absence of the added plant growth-promoting bacterium, transgenic canola plants grew to a significantly greater extent than non-transformedCanola plants.
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