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重金属超积累植物:它们是如何以及为什么这样做?又是什么使它们如此有趣?

Heavy metal hyperaccumulating plants: how and why do they do it? And what makes them so interesting?

机构信息

Department of Biology, University of Padova, via U. Bassi 58/B, I-35121 Padova, Italy.

出版信息

Plant Sci. 2011 Feb;180(2):169-81. doi: 10.1016/j.plantsci.2010.08.016. Epub 2010 Sep 15.

Abstract

The term "hyperaccumulator" describes a number of plants that belong to distantly related families, but share the ability to grow on metalliferous soils and to accumulate extraordinarily high amounts of heavy metals in the aerial organs, far in excess of the levels found in the majority of species, without suffering phytotoxic effects. Three basic hallmarks distinguish hyperaccumulators from related non-hyperaccumulating taxa: a strongly enhanced rate of heavy metal uptake, a faster root-to-shoot translocation and a greater ability to detoxify and sequester heavy metals in leaves. An interesting breakthrough that has emerged from comparative physiological and molecular analyses of hyperaccumulators and related non-hyperaccumulators is that most key steps of hyperaccumulation rely on different regulation and expression of genes found in both kinds of plants. In particular, a determinant role in driving the uptake, translocation to leaves and, finally, sequestration in vacuoles or cell walls of great amounts of heavy metals, is played in hyperaccumulators by constitutive overexpression of genes encoding transmembrane transporters, such as members of ZIP, HMA, MATE, YSL and MTP families. Among the hypotheses proposed to explain the function of hyperaccumulation, most evidence has supported the "elemental defence" hypothesis, which states that plants hyperaccumulate heavy metals as a defence mechanism against natural enemies, such as herbivores. According to the more recent hypothesis of "joint effects", heavy metals can operate in concert with organic defensive compounds leading to enhanced plant defence overall. Heavy metal contaminated soils pose an increasing problem to human and animal health. Using plants that hyperaccumulate specific metals in cleanup efforts appeared over the last 20 years. Metal accumulating species can be used for phytoremediation (removal of contaminant from soils) or phytomining (growing plants to harvest the metals). In addition, as many of the metals that can be hyperaccumulated are also essential nutrients, food fortification and phytoremediation might be considered two sides of the same coin. An overview of literature discussing the phytoremediation capacity of hyperaccumulators to clean up soils contaminated with heavy metals and the possibility of using these plants in phytomining is presented.

摘要

“超积累植物”一词描述了一些属于远缘科的植物,它们具有在富含金属的土壤上生长并在地上器官中积累极高水平重金属的能力,远远超过大多数物种的水平,而不会遭受植物毒性效应。超积累植物与相关非超积累分类群有三个基本特征:重金属摄取率显著增强、更快的根到梢转运以及更强的解毒和将重金属隔离在叶片中的能力。通过对超积累植物和相关非超积累植物的比较生理和分子分析得出的一个有趣突破是,超积累的大多数关键步骤依赖于这两种植物中发现的基因的不同调控和表达。特别是,跨膜转运蛋白(如 ZIP、HMA、MATE、YSL 和 MTP 家族的成员)的基因组成型过表达在驱动大量重金属的摄取、向叶片转运以及最终在液泡或细胞壁中隔离方面发挥了决定性作用。在解释超积累功能的假说中,大多数证据支持“元素防御”假说,该假说指出植物超积累重金属是一种防御机制,以抵御自然天敌,如食草动物。根据最近的“联合效应”假说,重金属可以与有机防御化合物协同作用,从而增强整体植物防御。重金属污染土壤对人类和动物健康构成日益严重的威胁。在过去的 20 年中,人们利用特定金属超积累的植物来进行清理工作。金属积累物种可用于植物修复(从土壤中去除污染物)或植物采矿(种植植物以收获金属)。此外,由于许多可超积累的金属也是必需的营养物质,因此,食品强化和植物修复可以被认为是同一枚硬币的两面。本文概述了讨论超积累植物净化重金属污染土壤的植物修复能力以及利用这些植物进行植物采矿的可能性的文献。

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