Abstract

Phytoremediation is the use of plants for the treatment of environmental pollution, including chlorinated organics. although conceptually very attractive, removal and biodegradation of chlorinated pollutants by plants is a rather slow and inefficient process resulting in incomplete treatment and potential release of toxic metabolites into the environment. In order to overcome inherent limitations of plant metabolic capabilities, plants have been genetically modified, following a strategy similar to the development of transgenic crops: genes from bacteria, fungi, and mammals involved in the metabolism of organic contaminants, such as cytochrome p-450 and glutathione substrate catabolic genes, natural or engineered, for the simultaneous remediation of a range of pollutants, such as usually found in contaminated sites, e.g., chlorinated solvent, metals, and nitroaromatics. In addition, biodegradation of many xenobiotics are catalyzed by similar, broad-substrate enzymes, such as cytochrome P-450 monoxygenases, glutathione S-transferases, and fungal peroxidases, that can potentially be used for the treatment of multiple pollutants. Moreover, the introduction of multiple transgenes involved in different phases of the metabolism of xenobiotics in plants, i.e., uptake by roots and the different phases of the green liver model, would allow enhancing both the removal and metabolism of several toxic compounds and could therefore help overcome a major limitation inherent to phytoremediation, i.e., the threat that accumulated toxic compounds would volatilize or otherwise contaminate the food chain. An important barrier to the application of transgenic plants for bioremediation in the field is associated with the true or perceived risk of horizontal gene transfer to related wild or cultivated plants. Therefore, it is likely that the next generation of transgenic plants will involve systems preventing such a transfer, for instance by the introduction of transgenes into chloroplastic DNA or the use of conditional lethality genes (Davison, 2005). Since bacteria naturally exchange plasmids via conjugation, endophytes that gain genes involved in pollutant degradation might not be considered ‘genetically modified’ and may be subject to fewer restrictions in usage.

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