An engineered plant that accumulates higher levels of heavy metals than Thlaspi caerulescens, with yields of 100 times more biomass in mine soils |
| |
Authors: | Martínez Mar Bernal Pilar Almela Concepción Vélez Dinoraz García-Agustín Pilar Serrano Ramón Navarro-Aviñó Juan |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of the Stress Biology, IBMCP, CSIC, Camino de Vera s.n., Post Code 46022 Valencia, Spain. |
| |
Abstract: | Nicotiana glauca transformed with TaPCS1 was tested for its application in phytoremediation. When plantlets were grown in mine soils containing Cu, Zn, and Pb (42, 2600, and 1500 mg kg(-1)) the plant showed high levels of accumulation especially of Zn and Pb. Adult plants growing in mine soils containing different heavy metal concentrations showed a greater accumulation as well as an extension to a wider range of elements, including Cd, Ni and B. The overexpressed gene confers up to 9 and 36 times more Cd and Pb accumulation in the shoots under hydroponic conditions, and a 3- and 6-fold increase in mining soils. When the hyperaccumulator Thlaspi caerulescens was compared, the results were higher values of heavy metal and Boron accumulation, with a yield of 100 times more biomass. Thlaspi was unable to survive in mining soils containing either a level higher than 11000 mg kg(-1) of Pb and 4500 mg kg(-1) of Zn, while engineered plants yielded an average of 0.5 kg per plant. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|