Abstract

Some plants can tolerate and even detoxify soils contaminated with heavy metals. This detoxification ability may depend on what chemical forms of metals are taken up by plants and how the plants distribute the toxins in their tissues. This, in turn, may have an important impact on phytoremediation. We investigated the impact of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungus, Glomus intraradices, on the subcellular distribution and chemical forms of cadmium (Cd) in alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) that were grown in Cd-added soils. The fungus significantly colonized alfalfa roots by day 25 after planting. Colonization of alfalfa by G. intraradices in soils contaminated with Cd ranged from 17% to 69% after 25–60 days and then decreased to 43%. The biomass of plant shoots with AM fungi showed significant 1.7-fold increases compared to no AM fungi addition under the treatment of 20 mg·kg−1 Cd. Concentrations of Cd in the shoots of alfalfa under 0.5, 5, and 20 mg·kg−1 Cd without AM fungal inoculation are 1.87, 2.92, and 2.38 times higher, respectively, than those of fungi-inoculated plants. Fungal inoculation increased Cd (37.2–80.5%) in the cell walls of roots and shoots and decreased in membranes after 80 days of incubation compared to untreated plants. The proportion of the inactive forms of Cd in roots was higher in fungi-treated plants than in controls. Furthermore, although fungi-treated plants had less overall Cd in subcellular fragments in shoots, they had more inactive Cd in shoots than did control plants. These results provide a basis for further research on plant-microbe symbioses in soils contaminated with heavy metals, which may potentially help us develop management regimes for phytoremediation.

Highlights

  • Cadmium (Cd) is a widespread hazardous heavy metal

  • The shoots and roots biomass of untreated plants decreased with increasing Cd concentration, arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungal inoculation significantly increased the biomass of roots and shoots compared to untreated plants

  • This detoxification ability may depend on what chemical forms of metals are taken up by plants and how the plants distribute the toxins in their tissues, and these factors may impact phytoremediation efforts [25,26,27]

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Summary

Introduction

Cadmium (Cd) is a widespread hazardous heavy metal. Many agricultural soils have elevated concentrations of Cd resulting from management practices such the application of sewage sludge or animal manure. Mining activities can lead to high concentrations of Cd in surrounding lands. These and other practices may threaten environmental quality and sustainable food production [1,2]. Some plants that can grow in Cd-contaminated soils have evolved mechanisms for tolerating heavy metals inside plant cells [4]. There is some evidence that metal tolerance and detoxification in plants can be achieved by confining toxins to a subcellular distribution or by changing their chemical structure. In Brassica juncea and Arabidopsis thaliana, leaf trichomes appear to be preferential storage and detoxification sites for Cd [7]. In Cd-tolerant Salix viminalis, pectin-rich layers of the collenchyma cell walls of leaf veins are an important Cd sink [8]

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