Abstract

Escalating anthropogenic activities have soared heavy metal contamination in the environmental matrices. Due to recalcitrant and toxic nature, their occurrence in high titers in the environment can threaten survival of biotic components. To take the edge off, remediation of metal contaminated sites by phytoremediators that exhibit potential to withstand under heavy metal contamination and quench harmful metals is considered eco-sustainable approach. Despite enormous potential, the phytoremediation technique suffers a setback owing to high metal concentrations, occurrence of multiple pollutants, low plant biomass, and soil physicochemical status that affect plants at cellular and molecular levels, inducing morphological, physiological, and genetic alterations. Nevertheless, augmentation of soil with microorganisms can alleviate the challenge. A positive nexus between microbes and phytoremediators, particularly plant growth-promoting microorganisms (PGPMs) can prevent phytotoxicity and augment phytoremediation by employing strategies like production of secondary metabolites, solubilization of phosphate, and synthesis of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) deaminase and phytohormones Microbes can mediate tolerance in plants by fortifying their antioxidant machinery, which maintains redox homeostasis and alleviates metal-induced oxidative damage in the plants. Associated microbes can also activate stress-responsive genes in plants and abridge metal-induced toxic effects. An in-depth exploration of the mechanisms employed by plant-associated microbes to trigger tolerance in phytoremediators is crucial for improving their phytoremediation potential and real-world applications. The present literature makes an attempt to comprehensively review these mechanisms that eventually facilitate development of improved/new technology for soil ecosystem restoration.

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