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Alleviation of cadmium uptake in rice (Oryza sativa L.) by iron plaque on the root surface generated by Providencia manganoxydans via Fe(II) oxidation.

Authors :
Li, Ding
He, Zeping
Chen, Sha
Chen, Jinyuan
Ding, Zhexu
Luo, Jun
Li, Zongpei
Hu, Yuanyi
Source :
Archives of Microbiology. Sep2024, Vol. 206 Issue 9, p1-16. 16p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Iron plaque is believed to be effective in reducing the accumulation of heavy metals in rice. In this work, a known soil-derived Mn(II)-oxidizing bacterium, LLDRA6, which represents the type strain of Providencia manganoxydans, was employed to investigate the feasibility of decreasing cadmium (Cd) accumulation in rice by promoting the formation of iron plaque on the root surface. Firstly, the Fe(II) oxidation ability of LLDRA6 was evaluated using various techniques including Fourier Transform infrared spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, phenanthroline photometry, and FeS gel-stabilized gradient assays. Subsequently, the formation of iron plaque on the root surface by LLDRA6 was investigated under hydroponic and pot conditions. Finally, Cd concentrations were examined in rice with and without iron plaque through pot and paddy-field tests. The results showed that LLDRA6 played an efficient role in the formation of iron plaque on seedling roots under hydroponic conditions, generating 44.87 and 36.72 g kg− 1 of iron plaque on the roots of Huazhan and TP309, respectively. In pot experiments, LLDRA6 produced iron plaque exclusively in the presence of Fe(II). Otherwise, it solely generated biofilm on the root surface. Together with Fe(II), LLDRA6 effectively reduced the concentrations of Cd in Huazhan roots, straws and grains by 25%, 46% and 44%, respectively. This combination also demonstrated a significant decrease in the Cd concentrations of TP309 roots, straws and grains by 20%, 52% and 44%, respectively. The data from the Cd translocation factor indicate that obstruction of Cd translocation by iron plaque predominantly occurred during the root-to-straw stage. In paddy-field tests, the Cd concentrations of grains harvested from the combination treatment of LLDRA6 and Fe(II) exhibited a decline ranging from 40 to 53%, which fell below the maximum acceptable value for Cd in rice grains (0.2 mg kg− 1) as per the China national standard for food security (GB2762-2017). Meanwhile, the relevant phenotypic traits regarding the yield were not adversely affected. These findings have demonstrated that LLDRA6 can impede the uptake of Cd by rice in Cd-contaminated soils through the formation of iron plaque on roots, thus providing a promising safe Cd-barrier for rice production.Highlights: λ Strain LLDRA6 was proven to be able to oxidize Fe(II). λ Strain LLDRA6 produced 51.15–75.11 g kg-1 of iron plaque on the root surface in pot soils. λ Iron plaque decreased the accumulation of Cd by 40–53% in grains harvested from paddy fields. λ Iron plaque exhibited no negative impact on the phenotypic traits related to yield. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03028933
Volume :
206
Issue :
9
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Archives of Microbiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179307467
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00203-024-04110-4