Abstract

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) have the potential to cause cancer, teratogenicity, and mutagenesis in humans. Long-term plant safe production relies on how PAHs are transported and coordinated across organs. However, the acropetal transfer mechanism of PAHs in staple crop stems, particularly in xylem, a critical path, is unknown. Herein, we first confirmed the presence of specific interaction between the proteins and phenanthrene by employing the magnetic phenanthrene-bound bead immunoassay and label free liquid chromatograph mass spectrometer (LC-MS/MS), suggesting that peroxidase (uniprot accession: A0A3B5XXD0) and unidentified proteins (uniprot accession: A0A3B6LUC6) may function as the carriers to load and acropetally translocate phenanthrene (a model PAH) in wheat xylem. This specified binding of protein-phenanthrene may form through hydrophobic interactions in the conservative binding region, as revealed by protein structural investigations and molecular docking. To further investigate the role of these proteins in phenanthrene solubilization, phenanthrene exposure was conducted: a substantial quantity of peroxidase was produced; an unusually high expression of uncharacterized proteins was observed, indicating their positive effects in the acropetal transfer of phenanthrene in wheat xylem. These data confirmed that the two proteins are crucial in the solubilization of phenanthrene in wheat xylem sap. Our findings provide fresh light on the molecular mechanism of PAH loading in plant xylem and techniques for ensuring the security of staple crops and improving the efficacy of phytoremediation in a PAH-contaminated environment.

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