Abstract

The objective of this work was to study the effect of two concentrations (10 and 100 mg kg −1) of phenanthrene, a ubiquitous polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH), on root exudation of the remediating plant Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench under controlled conditions in a pot experiment. It was found that the phenanthrene concentration of 10 mg kg −1 did not cause significant effects on plant survival and growth but had little stimulating effect on carbohydrate exudation. The contamination with phenanthrene at 100 mg kg −1 inhibited accumulation of plant shoot and root biomass, decreasing the carboxylic acid, carbohydrate, and amino acid amounts released by sorghum root into the rhizosphere. However, root exudation per unit of root surface was not changed significantly with increasing phenanthrene concentration. There were no differences in qualitative composition of root exudates under the influence of PAH were found. The observed alterations in the ratio between the main root-exuded components are assumed to manifest adaptive alterations occurring in the plant as a response to pollutant stress. The activity of three oxidoreductases (oxidase, peroxidase, and tyrosinase) released by sorghum roots was clearly progressive to the increasing phenanthrene concentration in the substrate. Under the influence of phenanthrene, the population of phenanthrene-degrading microorganisms in sorghum root zone increased, and their share in the total number of culturable heterotrophs increased as well. The main promotional factor was the pollutant; however, the stimulating effect of the plant root exudates was also involved. The increased pollutant-degrading microbial population and activity of the extracellular root enzymes are presumed to be important for the rhizodegradation of PAH.

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