Department of Biology, Faculty of Science and Mathematics, Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris, 35900, Tanjong Malim, Perak, Malaysia.
Applied Science Research Center, Applied Science Private University, Amman, Jordan.
Planta. 2024 Mar 29;259(5):103. doi: 10.1007/s00425-024-04378-2.
Heavy metal pollution caused by human activities is a serious threat to the environment and human health. Plants have evolved sophisticated defence systems to deal with heavy metal stress, with proteins and enzymes serving as critical intercepting agents for heavy metal toxicity reduction. Proteomics continues to be effective in identifying markers associated with stress response and metabolic processes. This review explores the complex interactions between heavy metal pollution and plant physiology, with an emphasis on proteomic and biotechnological perspectives. Over the last century, accelerated industrialization, agriculture activities, energy production, and urbanization have established a constant need for natural resources, resulting in environmental degradation. The widespread buildup of heavy metals in ecosystems as a result of human activity is especially concerning. Although some heavy metals are required by organisms in trace amounts, high concentrations pose serious risks to the ecosystem and human health. As immobile organisms, plants are directly exposed to heavy metal contamination, prompting the development of robust defence mechanisms. Proteomics has been used to understand how plants react to heavy metal stress. The development of proteomic techniques offers promising opportunities to improve plant tolerance to toxicity from heavy metals. Additionally, there is substantial scope for phytoremediation, a sustainable method that uses plants to extract, sequester, or eliminate contaminants in the context of changes in protein expression and total protein behaviour. Changes in proteins and enzymatic activities have been highlighted to illuminate the complex effects of heavy metal pollution on plant metabolism, and how proteomic research has revealed the plant's ability to mitigate heavy metal toxicity by intercepting vital nutrients, organic substances, and/or microorganisms.
人类活动造成的重金属污染对环境和人类健康构成了严重威胁。植物已经进化出复杂的防御系统来应对重金属胁迫,其中蛋白质和酶作为重金属毒性降低的关键拦截剂。蛋白质组学在鉴定与应激反应和代谢过程相关的标志物方面仍然非常有效。本综述探讨了重金属污染与植物生理学之间的复杂相互作用,重点介绍了蛋白质组学和生物技术的观点。在过去的一个世纪里,加速的工业化、农业活动、能源生产和城市化对自然资源的需求不断增加,导致了环境恶化。人类活动导致重金属在生态系统中广泛积累,尤其令人担忧。尽管一些重金属在痕量水平上是生物体所必需的,但高浓度对生态系统和人类健康构成了严重风险。由于植物是不能移动的生物体,它们直接暴露于重金属污染中,从而促使其发展出强大的防御机制。蛋白质组学已被用于研究植物对重金属胁迫的反应。蛋白质组学技术的发展为提高植物对重金属毒性的耐受性提供了有前途的机会。此外,利用植物提取、隔离或消除污染物的植物修复具有很大的潜力,这是一种可持续的方法,它可以改变蛋白质表达和总蛋白行为。强调了蛋白质和酶活性的变化,以阐明重金属污染对植物代谢的复杂影响,以及蛋白质组学研究如何通过拦截重要的营养物质、有机物质和/或微生物来揭示植物减轻重金属毒性的能力。