Abstract

Varied environmental compartments including soils are being contaminated by a myriad toxic metal(loid)s (hereafter termed as “metal/s”) mainly through anthropogenic activities. These metals may contaminate food chain and bring irreparable consequences in human. Plant-based approach (phytoremediation) stands second to none among bioremediation technologies meant for sustainable cleanup of soils/sites with metal-contamination. In turn, the capacity of plants to tolerate potential consequences caused by the extracted/accumulated metals decides the effectiveness and success of phytoremediation system. Chelation is among the potential mechanisms that largely govern metal-tolerance in plant cells by maintaining low concentrations of free metals in cytoplasm. Metal-chelation can be performed by compounds of both thiol origin (such as GSH, glutathione; PCs, phytochelatins; MTs, metallothioneins) and non-thiol origin (such as histidine, nicotianamine, organic acids). This paper presents an appraisal of recent reports on both thiol and non-thiol compounds in an effort to shed light on the significance of these compounds in plant-metal tolerance, as well as to provide scientific clues for the advancement of metal-phytoextraction strategies.

Highlights

  • Metal(loid)s and their Chelation Strategies in Plants The Earth’s crust harbors varying levels of different metals/metalloids

  • PCs are nonribosomal peptides and are synthesized enzymatically in response to varied metals from GSH by phytochelatin synthase (PCS), which is a γ-GluCys dipeptidyl transpeptidase (E.C.2.3.2.15) (Vatamaniuk et al, 2004)

  • Hereunder follows an appraisal of recent studies on chelation of metals in plants considering the mentioned above major non-thiol compounds

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Summary

Frontiers in Plant Science

Received: 30 October 2014 Paper pending published: 13 January 2015 Accepted: 10 March 2015. Varied environmental compartments including soils are being contaminated by a myriad toxic metal(loid)s (hereafter termed as “metal/s”) mainly through anthropogenic activities. These metals may contaminate food chain and bring irreparable consequences in human. The capacity of plants to tolerate potential consequences caused by the extracted/accumulated metals decides the effectiveness and success of phytoremediation system. Chelation is among the potential mechanisms that largely govern metal-tolerance in plant cells by maintaining low concentrations of free metals in cytoplasm. This paper presents an appraisal of recent reports on both thiol and non-thiol compounds in an effort to shed light on the significance of these compounds in plant-metal tolerance, as well as to provide scientific clues for the advancement of metal-phytoextraction strategies

Introduction
Cysteine Proline
Increased Ni tolerance
Organic Acids
Reduction of metal influx
Amino Acids and their Derivatives
Conclusions and Future Prospects
Full Text
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