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Inoculation of Sinorhizobium saheli YH1 Leads to Reduced Metal Uptake for Leucaena leucocephala Grown in Mine Tailings and Metal-Polluted Soils

Metalliferous mine tailings have a negative impact on the soil environment near mining areas and render cultivable lands infertile. Phytoremediation involving the synergism of legume and rhizobia provides a useful technique in tackling this issue with cost-effective, environmentally friendly, and ea...

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Autores principales: Kang, Xia, Yu, Xiumei, Zhang, Yu, Cui, Yongliang, Tu, Weiguo, Wang, Qiongyao, Li, Yanmei, Hu, Lanfang, Gu, Yunfu, Zhao, Ke, Xiang, Quanju, Chen, Qiang, Ma, Menggen, Zou, Likou, Zhang, Xiaoping, Kang, Jinsan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6119820/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30210458
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2018.01853
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author Kang, Xia
Yu, Xiumei
Zhang, Yu
Cui, Yongliang
Tu, Weiguo
Wang, Qiongyao
Li, Yanmei
Hu, Lanfang
Gu, Yunfu
Zhao, Ke
Xiang, Quanju
Chen, Qiang
Ma, Menggen
Zou, Likou
Zhang, Xiaoping
Kang, Jinsan
author_facet Kang, Xia
Yu, Xiumei
Zhang, Yu
Cui, Yongliang
Tu, Weiguo
Wang, Qiongyao
Li, Yanmei
Hu, Lanfang
Gu, Yunfu
Zhao, Ke
Xiang, Quanju
Chen, Qiang
Ma, Menggen
Zou, Likou
Zhang, Xiaoping
Kang, Jinsan
author_sort Kang, Xia
collection PubMed
description Metalliferous mine tailings have a negative impact on the soil environment near mining areas and render cultivable lands infertile. Phytoremediation involving the synergism of legume and rhizobia provides a useful technique in tackling this issue with cost-effective, environmentally friendly, and easy-to-use features under adverse soil conditions. Leucaena leucocephala has been found to build symbiotic relationships with native rhizobia in the iron-vanadium-titanium oxide (V-Ti magnetite) mine tailing soil. Rhizobia YH1, isolated from the root nodules of L. leucocephala, was classified as Sinorhizobium saheli according to similarity and phylogenetic analyses of 16S rRNA, housekeeping and nitrogen fixation genes. Besides nitrogen fixation, S. saheli YH1 also showed capabilities to produce indole-acetic acid (IAA) (166.77 ± 2.03 mg l(−1)) and solubilize phosphate (104.41 ± 7.48 mg l(−1)). Pot culture experiments showed that strain YH1 increased the biomass, plant height and root length of L. leucocephala by 67.2, 39.5 and 27.2% respectively. There was also an average increase in plant N (10.0%), P (112.2%) and K (25.0%) contents compared to inoculation-free control. The inoculation of YH1 not only reduced the uptake of all metals by L. leucocephala in the mine tailings, but also resulted in decreased uptake of Cd by up to 79.9% and Mn by up to 67.6% for plants grown in soils contaminated with Cd/Mn. It was concluded that S. saheli YH1 possessed multiple beneficial effects on L. leucocephala grown in metalliferous soils. Our findings highlight the role of S. saheli YH1 in improving plant health of L. leucocephala by reducing metal uptake by plants grown in heavy metal-polluted soils. We also suggest the idea of using L. leucocephala-S. saheli association for phytoremediation and revegetation of V-Ti mine tailings and soils polluted with Cd or Mn.
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spelling pubmed-61198202018-09-12 Inoculation of Sinorhizobium saheli YH1 Leads to Reduced Metal Uptake for Leucaena leucocephala Grown in Mine Tailings and Metal-Polluted Soils Kang, Xia Yu, Xiumei Zhang, Yu Cui, Yongliang Tu, Weiguo Wang, Qiongyao Li, Yanmei Hu, Lanfang Gu, Yunfu Zhao, Ke Xiang, Quanju Chen, Qiang Ma, Menggen Zou, Likou Zhang, Xiaoping Kang, Jinsan Front Microbiol Microbiology Metalliferous mine tailings have a negative impact on the soil environment near mining areas and render cultivable lands infertile. Phytoremediation involving the synergism of legume and rhizobia provides a useful technique in tackling this issue with cost-effective, environmentally friendly, and easy-to-use features under adverse soil conditions. Leucaena leucocephala has been found to build symbiotic relationships with native rhizobia in the iron-vanadium-titanium oxide (V-Ti magnetite) mine tailing soil. Rhizobia YH1, isolated from the root nodules of L. leucocephala, was classified as Sinorhizobium saheli according to similarity and phylogenetic analyses of 16S rRNA, housekeeping and nitrogen fixation genes. Besides nitrogen fixation, S. saheli YH1 also showed capabilities to produce indole-acetic acid (IAA) (166.77 ± 2.03 mg l(−1)) and solubilize phosphate (104.41 ± 7.48 mg l(−1)). Pot culture experiments showed that strain YH1 increased the biomass, plant height and root length of L. leucocephala by 67.2, 39.5 and 27.2% respectively. There was also an average increase in plant N (10.0%), P (112.2%) and K (25.0%) contents compared to inoculation-free control. The inoculation of YH1 not only reduced the uptake of all metals by L. leucocephala in the mine tailings, but also resulted in decreased uptake of Cd by up to 79.9% and Mn by up to 67.6% for plants grown in soils contaminated with Cd/Mn. It was concluded that S. saheli YH1 possessed multiple beneficial effects on L. leucocephala grown in metalliferous soils. Our findings highlight the role of S. saheli YH1 in improving plant health of L. leucocephala by reducing metal uptake by plants grown in heavy metal-polluted soils. We also suggest the idea of using L. leucocephala-S. saheli association for phytoremediation and revegetation of V-Ti mine tailings and soils polluted with Cd or Mn. Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-08-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6119820/ /pubmed/30210458 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2018.01853 Text en Copyright © 2018 Kang, Yu, Zhang, Cui, Tu, Wang, Li, Hu, Gu, Zhao, Xiang, Chen, Ma, Zou, Zhang and Kang. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Kang, Xia
Yu, Xiumei
Zhang, Yu
Cui, Yongliang
Tu, Weiguo
Wang, Qiongyao
Li, Yanmei
Hu, Lanfang
Gu, Yunfu
Zhao, Ke
Xiang, Quanju
Chen, Qiang
Ma, Menggen
Zou, Likou
Zhang, Xiaoping
Kang, Jinsan
Inoculation of Sinorhizobium saheli YH1 Leads to Reduced Metal Uptake for Leucaena leucocephala Grown in Mine Tailings and Metal-Polluted Soils
title Inoculation of Sinorhizobium saheli YH1 Leads to Reduced Metal Uptake for Leucaena leucocephala Grown in Mine Tailings and Metal-Polluted Soils
title_full Inoculation of Sinorhizobium saheli YH1 Leads to Reduced Metal Uptake for Leucaena leucocephala Grown in Mine Tailings and Metal-Polluted Soils
title_fullStr Inoculation of Sinorhizobium saheli YH1 Leads to Reduced Metal Uptake for Leucaena leucocephala Grown in Mine Tailings and Metal-Polluted Soils
title_full_unstemmed Inoculation of Sinorhizobium saheli YH1 Leads to Reduced Metal Uptake for Leucaena leucocephala Grown in Mine Tailings and Metal-Polluted Soils
title_short Inoculation of Sinorhizobium saheli YH1 Leads to Reduced Metal Uptake for Leucaena leucocephala Grown in Mine Tailings and Metal-Polluted Soils
title_sort inoculation of sinorhizobium saheli yh1 leads to reduced metal uptake for leucaena leucocephala grown in mine tailings and metal-polluted soils
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6119820/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30210458
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2018.01853
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