Divergent biology of facultative heavy metal plants

2017
journal article
review article
89
cris.lastimport.wos2024-04-10T01:16:21Z
dc.abstract.enAmong heavy metal plants (the metallophytes), facultative species can live both in soils contaminated by an excess of heavy metals and in non-affected sites. In contrast, obligate metallophytes are restricted to polluted areas. Metallophytes offer a fascinating biology, due to the fact that species have developed different strategies to cope with the adverse conditions of heavy metal soils. The literature distinguishes between hyperaccumulating, accumulating, tolerant and excluding metallophytes, but the borderline between these categories is blurred. Due to the fact that heavy metal soils are dry, nutrient limited and are not uniform but have a patchy distribution in many instances, drought-tolerant or low nutrient demanding species are often regarded as metallophytes in the literature. In only a few cases, the concentrations of heavy metals in soils are so toxic that only a few specifically adapted plants, the genuine metallophytes, can cope with these adverse soil conditions. Current molecular biological studies focus on the genetically amenable and hyperaccumulating Arabidopsis halleri and Noccaea (Thlaspi) caerulescens of the Brassicaceae. Armeria maritima ssp. halleri utilizes glands for the excretion of heavy metals and is, therefore, a heavy metal excluder. The two endemic zinc violets of Western Europe, Viola lutea ssp. calaminaria of the Aachen-Liège area and Viola lutea ssp. westfalica of the Pb-Cu-ditch of Blankenrode, Eastern Westphalia, as well as Viola tricolor ecotypes of Eastern Europe, keep their cells free of excess heavy metals by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi which bind heavy metals. The Caryophyllaceae, Silene vulgaris f. humilis and Minuartia verna, apparently discard leaves when overloaded with heavy metals. All Central European metallophytes have close relatives that grow in areas outside of heavy metal soils, mainly in the Alps, and have, therefore, been considered as relicts of the glacial epoch in the past. However, the current literature favours the idea that hyperaccumulation of heavy metals serves plants as deterrent against attack by feeding animals (termed elemental defense hypothesis). The capability to hyperaccumulate heavy metals in A. halleri and N. caerulescens is achieved by duplications and alterations of the cis-regulatory properties of genes coding for heavy metal transporting/excreting proteins. Several metallophytes have developed ecotypes with a varying content of such heavy metal transporters as an adaption to the specific toxicity of a heavy metal site.pl
dc.affiliationWydział Biologii i Nauk o Ziemi : Instytut Botanikipl
dc.contributor.authorBothe, Hermannpl
dc.contributor.authorSłomka, Aneta - 145327 pl
dc.date.accessioned2018-03-01T08:49:58Z
dc.date.available2018-03-01T08:49:58Z
dc.date.issued2017pl
dc.description.physical45-61pl
dc.description.volume219pl
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.jplph.2017.08.014pl
dc.identifier.eissn1618-1328pl
dc.identifier.issn0176-1617pl
dc.identifier.urihttps://ruj.uj.edu.pl/xmlui/handle/item/50894
dc.languageengpl
dc.language.containerengpl
dc.rightsDodaję tylko opis bibliograficzny*
dc.rights.licenceBez licencji otwartego dostępu
dc.rights.uri*
dc.subject.enheavy metal plantspl
dc.subject.enmetallophytespl
dc.subject.enheavy metal pollutionpl
dc.subject.entoxicity by heavy metalspl
dc.subject.enhyperaccumulation and heavy metal tolerancepl
dc.subject.enbiology and molecular biology of metallophytespl
dc.subject.enreproductive processes and evolutionary aspects of metallophytespl
dc.subtypeReviewArticlepl
dc.titleDivergent biology of facultative heavy metal plantspl
dc.title.journalJournal of Plant Physiologypl
dc.typeJournalArticlepl
dspace.entity.typePublication
cris.lastimport.wos
2024-04-10T01:16:21Z
dc.abstract.enpl
Among heavy metal plants (the metallophytes), facultative species can live both in soils contaminated by an excess of heavy metals and in non-affected sites. In contrast, obligate metallophytes are restricted to polluted areas. Metallophytes offer a fascinating biology, due to the fact that species have developed different strategies to cope with the adverse conditions of heavy metal soils. The literature distinguishes between hyperaccumulating, accumulating, tolerant and excluding metallophytes, but the borderline between these categories is blurred. Due to the fact that heavy metal soils are dry, nutrient limited and are not uniform but have a patchy distribution in many instances, drought-tolerant or low nutrient demanding species are often regarded as metallophytes in the literature. In only a few cases, the concentrations of heavy metals in soils are so toxic that only a few specifically adapted plants, the genuine metallophytes, can cope with these adverse soil conditions. Current molecular biological studies focus on the genetically amenable and hyperaccumulating Arabidopsis halleri and Noccaea (Thlaspi) caerulescens of the Brassicaceae. Armeria maritima ssp. halleri utilizes glands for the excretion of heavy metals and is, therefore, a heavy metal excluder. The two endemic zinc violets of Western Europe, Viola lutea ssp. calaminaria of the Aachen-Liège area and Viola lutea ssp. westfalica of the Pb-Cu-ditch of Blankenrode, Eastern Westphalia, as well as Viola tricolor ecotypes of Eastern Europe, keep their cells free of excess heavy metals by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi which bind heavy metals. The Caryophyllaceae, Silene vulgaris f. humilis and Minuartia verna, apparently discard leaves when overloaded with heavy metals. All Central European metallophytes have close relatives that grow in areas outside of heavy metal soils, mainly in the Alps, and have, therefore, been considered as relicts of the glacial epoch in the past. However, the current literature favours the idea that hyperaccumulation of heavy metals serves plants as deterrent against attack by feeding animals (termed elemental defense hypothesis). The capability to hyperaccumulate heavy metals in A. halleri and N. caerulescens is achieved by duplications and alterations of the cis-regulatory properties of genes coding for heavy metal transporting/excreting proteins. Several metallophytes have developed ecotypes with a varying content of such heavy metal transporters as an adaption to the specific toxicity of a heavy metal site.
dc.affiliationpl
Wydział Biologii i Nauk o Ziemi : Instytut Botaniki
dc.contributor.authorpl
Bothe, Hermann
dc.contributor.authorpl
Słomka, Aneta - 145327
dc.date.accessioned
2018-03-01T08:49:58Z
dc.date.available
2018-03-01T08:49:58Z
dc.date.issuedpl
2017
dc.description.physicalpl
45-61
dc.description.volumepl
219
dc.identifier.doipl
10.1016/j.jplph.2017.08.014
dc.identifier.eissnpl
1618-1328
dc.identifier.issnpl
0176-1617
dc.identifier.uri
https://ruj.uj.edu.pl/xmlui/handle/item/50894
dc.languagepl
eng
dc.language.containerpl
eng
dc.rights*
Dodaję tylko opis bibliograficzny
dc.rights.licence
Bez licencji otwartego dostępu
dc.rights.uri*
dc.subject.enpl
heavy metal plants
dc.subject.enpl
metallophytes
dc.subject.enpl
heavy metal pollution
dc.subject.enpl
toxicity by heavy metals
dc.subject.enpl
hyperaccumulation and heavy metal tolerance
dc.subject.enpl
biology and molecular biology of metallophytes
dc.subject.enpl
reproductive processes and evolutionary aspects of metallophytes
dc.subtypepl
ReviewArticle
dc.titlepl
Divergent biology of facultative heavy metal plants
dc.title.journalpl
Journal of Plant Physiology
dc.typepl
JournalArticle
dspace.entity.type
Publication
Affiliations

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