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Biochar potentially enhances maize tolerance to arsenic toxicity by improving physiological and biochemical responses to excessive arsenate

Authors :
Md. Mezanur Rahman
Ashim Kumar Das
Sharmin Sultana
Protik Kumar Ghosh
Md. Robyul Islam
Sanjida Sultana Keya
Minhaz Ahmed
Sheikh Arafat Islam Nihad
Md. Arifur Rahman Khan
Mylea C. Lovell
Md. Abiar Rahman
S. M. Ahsan
Touhidur Rahman Anik
Pallavi Fnu
Lam-Son Phan Tran
Mohammad Golam Mostofa
Source :
Biochar, Vol 5, Iss 1, Pp 1-21 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract Metalloid pollution, including arsenic poisoning, is a serious environmental issue, plaguing plant productivity and quality of life worldwide. Biochar, a carbon-rich material, has been known to alleviate the negative effects of environmental pollutants on plants. However, the specific role of biochar in mitigating arsenic stress in maize remains relatively unexplored. Here, we elucidated the functions of biochar in improving maize growth under the elevated level of sodium arsenate (Na2AsO4, AsV). Maize plants were grown in pot-soils amended with two doses of biochar (2.5% (B1) and 5.0% (B2) biochar Kg−1 of soil) for 5 days, followed by exposure to Na2AsO4 ('B1 + AsV'and 'B2 + AsV') for 9 days. Maize plants exposed to AsV only accumulated substantial amount of arsenic in both roots and leaves, triggering severe phytotoxic effects, including stunted growth, leaf-yellowing, chlorosis, reduced photosynthesis, and nutritional imbalance, when compared with control plants. Contrariwise, biochar addition improved the phenotype and growth of AsV-stressed maize plants by reducing root-to-leaf AsV translocation (by 46.56 and 57.46% in ‘B1 + AsV’ and ‘B2 + AsV’ plants), improving gas-exchange attributes, and elevating chlorophylls and mineral levels beyond AsV-stressed plants. Biochar pretreatment also substantially counteracted AsV-induced oxidative stress by lowering reactive oxygen species accumulation, lipoxygenase activity, malondialdehyde level, and electrolyte leakage. Less oxidative stress in ‘B1 + AsV’ and ‘B2 + AsV’ plants likely supported by a strong antioxidant system powered by biochar-mediated increased activities of superoxide dismutase (by 25.12 and 46.55%), catalase (51.78 and 82.82%), and glutathione S-transferase (61.48 and 153.83%), and improved flavonoid levels (41.48 and 75.37%, respectively). Furthermore, increased levels of soluble sugars and free amino acids also correlated with improved leaf relative water content, suggesting a better osmotic acclimatization mechanism in biochar-pretreated AsV-exposed plants. Overall, our findings provided mechanistic insight into how biochar facilitates maize’s active recovery from AsV-stress, implying that biochar application may be a viable technique for mitigating negative effects of arsenic in maize, and perhaps, in other important cereal crops. Graphical Abstract

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25247867 and 22387110
Volume :
5
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Biochar
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.59ad223871104e80a782a365382f2c64
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s42773-023-00270-6