Abstract

Heavy metal (HM) contamination of soil and water resources is a global concern, which not only limits crop yield and quality, but also has serious environmental effects. Due to the non-biodegradable nature and toxicity, high concentration of HMs in food and environment is a serious threat to the entire ecosystem. Moreover, the target of supplying safe and quality food to the rising human population (expected to reach ~9–10 bn by the year 2050), necessitates effective treatment of the HM-contaminated soil. Various microbe-mediated bioremediation strategies such as biosorption, bioprecipiation, biostimulation, etc., have been found to be effective in uptake and conversion of HMs to less toxic forms. Further, in the past few years, the use of soil and plant-associated microbiome for HM stress alleviation is gaining attention among the scientific community. In general, microbes are spectacular in being dynamic and more responsive to environmental conditions in comparison to their host plants. Moreover, with the advancements in high throughput sequencing technologies, the focus is eventually shifting from just structural characterization to functional insights into the microbiome. The microbes inhabiting the HM-contaminated environments or associated with HM-tolerant plants are a source for exploring HM-tolerant microbial communities, which could be used for enhancing bioremediation efficiency and conferring HM tolerance in plants. This review discusses the application of omics techniques including metagenomics, metatranscriptomics, metaproteomics, and metabolomics, for rapid and robust identification of HM-tolerant microbial communities, mining novel HM resistance genes, and fabricating the HM resistome.

Highlights

  • Heavy metals (HMs) constitute a class of non-biodegradable environmental pollutants, which have detrimental effects on both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems (Banach et al, 2020)

  • This review article focuses on the application of omics technologies for identification of HM-tolerant microbiota, their genes/operons and mechanism of HM stress alleviation, for bioremediation and for imparting HM tolerance to crop plants

  • Omics approaches have been a boon in microbiome research, enabling identification and characterization of uncultured microbes, that constitute a major fraction (>90%) of the environmental samples

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Summary

Introduction

Heavy metals (HMs) constitute a class of non-biodegradable environmental pollutants, which have detrimental effects on both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems (Banach et al, 2020). Omics techniques (such as metagenomics, metatranscriptomics, metaproteomics, and metabolomics) have provided important leads on the microbial structure and composition (species abundance and diversity), metabolic potential (HM-tolerant/detoxification genes and proteins), and plant-microbe crosstalk, in response to HM stress.

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