Cargando…

Negative Impacts of Arsenic on Plants and Mitigation Strategies

Arsenic (As) is a metalloid prevalent mainly in soil and water. The presence of As above permissible levels becomes toxic and detrimental to living organisms, therefore, making it a significant global concern. Humans can absorb As through drinking polluted water and consuming As-contaminated food ma...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sinha, Dwaipayan, Datta, Soumi, Mishra, Reema, Agarwal, Preeti, Kumari, Tripti, Adeyemi, Sherif Babatunde, Kumar Maurya, Arun, Ganguly, Sharmistha, Atique, Usman, Seal, Sanchita, Kumari Gupta, Laxmi, Chowdhury, Shahana, Chen, Jen-Tsung
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10181087/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37176873
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12091815
_version_ 1785041489586290688
author Sinha, Dwaipayan
Datta, Soumi
Mishra, Reema
Agarwal, Preeti
Kumari, Tripti
Adeyemi, Sherif Babatunde
Kumar Maurya, Arun
Ganguly, Sharmistha
Atique, Usman
Seal, Sanchita
Kumari Gupta, Laxmi
Chowdhury, Shahana
Chen, Jen-Tsung
author_facet Sinha, Dwaipayan
Datta, Soumi
Mishra, Reema
Agarwal, Preeti
Kumari, Tripti
Adeyemi, Sherif Babatunde
Kumar Maurya, Arun
Ganguly, Sharmistha
Atique, Usman
Seal, Sanchita
Kumari Gupta, Laxmi
Chowdhury, Shahana
Chen, Jen-Tsung
author_sort Sinha, Dwaipayan
collection PubMed
description Arsenic (As) is a metalloid prevalent mainly in soil and water. The presence of As above permissible levels becomes toxic and detrimental to living organisms, therefore, making it a significant global concern. Humans can absorb As through drinking polluted water and consuming As-contaminated food material grown in soil having As problems. Since human beings are mobile organisms, they can use clean uncontaminated water and food found through various channels or switch from an As-contaminated area to a clean area; but plants are sessile and obtain As along with essential minerals and water through roots that make them more susceptible to arsenic poisoning and consequent stress. Arsenic and phosphorus have many similarities in terms of their physical and chemical characteristics, and they commonly compete to cause physiological anomalies in biological systems that contribute to further stress. Initial indicators of arsenic’s propensity to induce toxicity in plants are a decrease in yield and a loss in plant biomass. This is accompanied by considerable physiological alterations; including instant oxidative surge; followed by essential biomolecule oxidation. These variables ultimately result in cell permeability and an electrolyte imbalance. In addition, arsenic disturbs the nucleic acids, the transcription process, and the essential enzymes engaged with the plant system’s primary metabolic pathways. To lessen As absorption by plants, a variety of mitigation strategies have been proposed which include agronomic practices, plant breeding, genetic manipulation, computer-aided modeling, biochemical techniques, and the altering of human approaches regarding consumption and pollution, and in these ways, increased awareness may be generated. These mitigation strategies will further help in ensuring good health, food security, and environmental sustainability. This article summarises the nature of the impact of arsenic on plants, the physio-biochemical mechanisms evolved to cope with As stress, and the mitigation measures that can be employed to eliminate the negative effects of As.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10181087
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-101810872023-05-13 Negative Impacts of Arsenic on Plants and Mitigation Strategies Sinha, Dwaipayan Datta, Soumi Mishra, Reema Agarwal, Preeti Kumari, Tripti Adeyemi, Sherif Babatunde Kumar Maurya, Arun Ganguly, Sharmistha Atique, Usman Seal, Sanchita Kumari Gupta, Laxmi Chowdhury, Shahana Chen, Jen-Tsung Plants (Basel) Review Arsenic (As) is a metalloid prevalent mainly in soil and water. The presence of As above permissible levels becomes toxic and detrimental to living organisms, therefore, making it a significant global concern. Humans can absorb As through drinking polluted water and consuming As-contaminated food material grown in soil having As problems. Since human beings are mobile organisms, they can use clean uncontaminated water and food found through various channels or switch from an As-contaminated area to a clean area; but plants are sessile and obtain As along with essential minerals and water through roots that make them more susceptible to arsenic poisoning and consequent stress. Arsenic and phosphorus have many similarities in terms of their physical and chemical characteristics, and they commonly compete to cause physiological anomalies in biological systems that contribute to further stress. Initial indicators of arsenic’s propensity to induce toxicity in plants are a decrease in yield and a loss in plant biomass. This is accompanied by considerable physiological alterations; including instant oxidative surge; followed by essential biomolecule oxidation. These variables ultimately result in cell permeability and an electrolyte imbalance. In addition, arsenic disturbs the nucleic acids, the transcription process, and the essential enzymes engaged with the plant system’s primary metabolic pathways. To lessen As absorption by plants, a variety of mitigation strategies have been proposed which include agronomic practices, plant breeding, genetic manipulation, computer-aided modeling, biochemical techniques, and the altering of human approaches regarding consumption and pollution, and in these ways, increased awareness may be generated. These mitigation strategies will further help in ensuring good health, food security, and environmental sustainability. This article summarises the nature of the impact of arsenic on plants, the physio-biochemical mechanisms evolved to cope with As stress, and the mitigation measures that can be employed to eliminate the negative effects of As. MDPI 2023-04-28 /pmc/articles/PMC10181087/ /pubmed/37176873 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12091815 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Sinha, Dwaipayan
Datta, Soumi
Mishra, Reema
Agarwal, Preeti
Kumari, Tripti
Adeyemi, Sherif Babatunde
Kumar Maurya, Arun
Ganguly, Sharmistha
Atique, Usman
Seal, Sanchita
Kumari Gupta, Laxmi
Chowdhury, Shahana
Chen, Jen-Tsung
Negative Impacts of Arsenic on Plants and Mitigation Strategies
title Negative Impacts of Arsenic on Plants and Mitigation Strategies
title_full Negative Impacts of Arsenic on Plants and Mitigation Strategies
title_fullStr Negative Impacts of Arsenic on Plants and Mitigation Strategies
title_full_unstemmed Negative Impacts of Arsenic on Plants and Mitigation Strategies
title_short Negative Impacts of Arsenic on Plants and Mitigation Strategies
title_sort negative impacts of arsenic on plants and mitigation strategies
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10181087/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37176873
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12091815
work_keys_str_mv AT sinhadwaipayan negativeimpactsofarseniconplantsandmitigationstrategies
AT dattasoumi negativeimpactsofarseniconplantsandmitigationstrategies
AT mishrareema negativeimpactsofarseniconplantsandmitigationstrategies
AT agarwalpreeti negativeimpactsofarseniconplantsandmitigationstrategies
AT kumaritripti negativeimpactsofarseniconplantsandmitigationstrategies
AT adeyemisherifbabatunde negativeimpactsofarseniconplantsandmitigationstrategies
AT kumarmauryaarun negativeimpactsofarseniconplantsandmitigationstrategies
AT gangulysharmistha negativeimpactsofarseniconplantsandmitigationstrategies
AT atiqueusman negativeimpactsofarseniconplantsandmitigationstrategies
AT sealsanchita negativeimpactsofarseniconplantsandmitigationstrategies
AT kumariguptalaxmi negativeimpactsofarseniconplantsandmitigationstrategies
AT chowdhuryshahana negativeimpactsofarseniconplantsandmitigationstrategies
AT chenjentsung negativeimpactsofarseniconplantsandmitigationstrategies