Institute of Soil and Environmental Sciences, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad, 38000, Pakistan.
Agronomy Department, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, 32611, USA.
BMC Plant Biol. 2024 Oct 19;24(1):984. doi: 10.1186/s12870-024-05709-x.
Soil pollution by petroleum hydrocarbons (PHCs) reduces yield by changing the physico-chemical properties of soil and plants due to PHCs' biotoxicity and persistence. Thus, removing PHCs from the soil is crucial for ecological sustainability. Microbes-assisted phytoremediation is an economical and eco-friendly solution. The current work aimed to develop and use bacterial consortia (BC) for PHCs degradation and plant growth enhancement in hydrocarbon-contaminated soil. Initially, the enriched microbial cultures (that were prepared from PHCs-contaminated soils from five distinct regions) were obtained via screening through microcosm experiments. Afterward, two best microbial cultures were tested for PHCs degradation under various temperature and pH ranges. After culture optimization, isolation and characterization of bacterial strains were done to construct two BC. These constructed BC were tested in a pot experiment for hydrocarbons degradation and chickpea growth in PHCs contaminated soil.
Findings revealed that PHCs exerted significant phytotoxic effects on chickpea growth and physiology when cultivated in PHCs contaminated soil, reducing agronomic and physiological traits by 13-29% and 12-43%, respectively. However, in the presence of BC, the phytotoxic impacts of PHCs on chickpea plants were reduced, resulting in up to 24 - 35% improvement in agronomic and physiological characteristics as compared to un-inoculated contaminated controls. Furthermore, the bacterial consortia boosted chickpea's nutritional absorption and antioxidant mechanism. Most importantly, chickpea plants phytoremediated 52% of the initial PHCs concentration; however, adding BC1 and BC2 with chickpea plants further increased this removal and remediated 74% and 80% of the initial PHCs concentration, respectively.
In general, BC2 outperformed BC1 (with few exceptions) in promoting plant growth and PHCs elimination. Therefore, using multi-trait BC for PHCs degradation and plant growth improvement under PHCs stress may be an efficient and environmentally friendly strategy to deal with PHCs pollution and toxicity.
土壤中石油烃(PHC)的污染通过改变土壤和植物的理化性质来降低产量,这是由于 PHC 的生物毒性和持久性。因此,从土壤中去除 PHC 对于生态可持续性至关重要。微生物辅助植物修复是一种经济且环保的解决方案。本研究旨在开发和利用细菌群落(BC)来降解 PHC 并促进受烃污染土壤中植物的生长。首先,通过微宇宙实验进行筛选,从来自五个不同地区的 PHC 污染土壤中获得了富集微生物培养物。然后,在各种温度和 pH 范围内测试了两种最佳微生物培养物对 PHC 的降解。在培养优化后,对细菌菌株进行了分离和表征,以构建两个 BC。在受 PHC 污染的土壤中,将这些构建的 BC 用于盆栽实验,以降解烃并促进鹰嘴豆的生长。
研究结果表明,当在受 PHC 污染的土壤中种植鹰嘴豆时,PHC 对其生长和生理产生了显著的植物毒性作用,使农艺和生理特性分别降低了 13-29%和 12-43%。然而,在 BC 的存在下,PHC 对鹰嘴豆植物的植物毒性影响降低,与未接种污染对照相比,农艺和生理特性提高了 24-35%。此外,细菌群落促进了鹰嘴豆的营养吸收和抗氧化机制。最重要的是,鹰嘴豆植物将初始 PHC 浓度的 52%进行了植物修复;然而,添加 BC1 和 BC2 与鹰嘴豆植物一起进一步增加了这种去除率,分别将初始 PHC 浓度的 74%和 80%进行了修复。
总的来说,BC2 在促进植物生长和 PHC 去除方面优于 BC1(除少数例外)。因此,在 PHC 胁迫下,使用多性状 BC 来降解 PHC 并促进植物生长的提高可能是一种有效且环保的策略,可用于处理 PHC 污染和毒性。