Produktbild: Heavy Metal Toxicity and Tolerance in Plants

Heavy Metal Toxicity and Tolerance in Plants A Biological, Omics, and Genetic Engineering Approach

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

14.08.2023

Herausgeber

Hossain Mohammad Anwar + weitere

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

640

Maße (L/B/H)

25/17,5/3,9 cm

Gewicht

1247 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-119-90646-9

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

14.08.2023

Herausgeber

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

640

Maße (L/B/H)

25/17,5/3,9 cm

Gewicht

1247 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-119-90646-9

Herstelleradresse

Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Heavy Metal Toxicity and Tolerance in Plants
  • List of Contributors xix

    Preface xxix

    Editor Biographies xxxi

    1 Plant Response and Tolerance to Heavy Metal Toxicity: An Overview of Chemical Biology, Omics Studies, and Genetic Engineering 1
    Lovely Mahawar, Sakshi Pandey, Aparna Pandey, and Sheo Mohan Prasad

    1.1 Introduction 1

    1.2 Plant-Metal Interaction 2

    1.3 Effect of Heavy Metals on Plants 3

    1.3.1 Morphoanatomical Responses 3

    1.3.2 Physiological Responses 8

    1.3.3 Biochemical Responses 8

    1.3.4 Molecular Responses 9

    1.4 Mechanisms to Tolerate Heavy Metal Toxicity 10

    1.4.1 Avoidance 10

    1.4.1.1 Mycorrhizal Association 10

    1.4.1.2 Root Exudates 12

    1.4.2 Sequestration 12

    1.5 Important Strategies for the Enhancement of Metal Tolerance 15

    1.5.1 Omics 15

    1.5.1.1 Genomics 15

    1.5.1.2 Transcriptomics 15

    1.5.1.3 Proteomics 17

    1.5.1.4 Metabolomics 17

    1.5.1.5 Ionomics 18

    1.5.1.6 miRNAomics 19

    1.5.1.7 Metallomics 19

    1.5.2 Genetic Engineering 20

    1.5.2.1 CRISPR Technology 20

    1.5.2.2 Plastid Transformation 21

    1.5.2.3 Gene Silencing 22

    1.6 Conclusion and Future Prospects 22

    References 23

    2 Advanced Techniques in Omics Research in Relation to Heavy Metal/Metalloid Toxicity and Tolerance in Plants 35
    Ali Raza, Shanza Bashir , Hajar Salehi , Monica Jamla, Sidra Charagh, Abdolkarim Chehregani Rad, and Mohammad Anwar Hossain

    2.1 Introduction 35

    2.2 An Overview of Plant Responses to Heavy Metal Toxicity 36

    2.3 How the Integration of Multi-omics Data Sets Helps in Studying the Heavy Metal Stress Responses and Tolerance Mechanisms? 39

    2.3.1 The Contribution of State-of-the-Art Genomics-Assisted Breeding 39

    2.3.1.1 Quantitative Trait Locus (QTL) Mapping 39

    2.3.1.2 Genome-Wide Association Studies 41

    2.3.2 Transcriptomics 42

    2.3.3 Proteomics 44

    2.3.4 Metabolomics 46

    2.3.5 miRNAomics 47

    2.3.6 Phenomics 49

    2.4 Conclusion and Perspectives 50

    References 50

    3 Heavy Metals/Metalloids in Food Crops and Their Implications for Human Health 59
    Shihab Uddin, Hasina Afroz, Mahmud Hossain, Jessica Briffa, Renald Blundell, and Md. Rafiqul Islam

    3.1 Introduction 59

    3.2 Arsenic 60

    3.2.1 Sources and Forms 60

    3.2.2 Food Chain Contamination 62

    3.2.3 Pharmacokinetic Processes 62

    3.2.4 Toxicology Processes 62

    3.2.5 Remedial Options 63

    3.3 Cadmium 63

    3.3.1 Sources and Forms 64

    3.3.2 Food Chain Contamination 64

    3.3.3 Pharmacokinetic Processes 66

    3.3.4 Toxicology Processes 66

    3.3.5 Remedial Options 67

    3.4 Lead 67

    3.4.1 Sources and Forms 68

    3.4.2 Food Chain Contamination 68

    3.4.3 Pharmacokinetic Processes 68

    3.4.4 Toxicology Processes 70

    3.4.5 Remedial Options 71

    3.5 Chromium 72

    3.5.1 Sources and Forms 72

    3.5.2 Food Chain Contamination 74

    3.5.3 Pharmacokinetic Processes 74

    3.5.4 Toxicology Processes 74

    3.5.5 Remedial Options 75

    3.6 Mercury 76

    3.6.1 Sources and Forms 76

    3.6.2 Food Chain Contamination 77

    3.6.3 Pharmacokinetic Processes 79

    3.6.4 Toxicology Processes 79

    3.6.5 Remedial Options 80

    3.7 Conclusions 81

    References 81

    4 Aluminum Stress Tolerance in Plants: Insights from Omics Approaches 87
    Richa Srivastava, Ayan Sadhukhan, and Hiroyuki Koyama

    4.1 Introduction 87

    4.2 Exploration of Al Tolerance QTLs 89

    4.3 Unraveling the Genetic Architecture of Al Tolerance from Natural Variation 91

    4.4 Identification of Novel Al Tolerance Genes Through Genome-Wide Association Studies 91

    4.5 Exploring Expression Level Polymorphisms to Identify Upstream Al Signaling 92

    4.6 Comparative Transcriptome Analyses Identify Novel Al Tolerance Genes 93

    4.7 Identification of Al Tolerance Genes from Proteomics 95

    4.8 Conclusion and Future Perspectives 99

    References 99

    5 Breeding Approaches for Aluminum Toxicity Tolerance in Rice and Wheat 105
    Buu Chi Bui and Lang Thi Nguyen

    5.1 Introduction 105

    5.2 Plant Signaling 107

    5.3 Rice Genetic Mapping 107

    5.3.1 Linkage Mapping 107

    5.3.2 Association Mapping 108

    5.4 Root Transcriptome 109

    5.5 Wheat Genetic Mapping 114

    5.5.1 Wheat MATE Gene Family 116

    5.6 Wheat Proteomics 117

    5.7 Conclusion 118

    References 118

    6 Chromium Toxicity and Tolerance in Plants: Insights from Omics Studies 125
    Sonali Dubey, Manju Shri, and Debasis Chakrabarty

    6.1 Introduction 125

    6.2 Chromium Sources and Bioavailability 126

    6.3 Chromium Uptake, Translocation, and Sub-cellular Distribution in plants 127

    6.4 Detoxification Mechanisms for Cr 129

    6.5 Omics Approaches Used by Plants to Combat Cr Toxicity 130

    6.5.1 Transcriptomics 130

    6.5.2 Chromium-Induced miRNAs in Plants 132

    6.5.3 Metabolomics 133

    6.5.4 Proteomics 133

    6.6 Phytoremediation of Cr Metal by Plants 134

    6.6.1 Phytoremediation Approach for Cr Detoxification 134

    6.6.2 Other Strategies Involved in Cr Remediation 135

    6.6.3 Phytostabilization/Phytoextraction for Cr Decontamination 136

    6.7 Conclusion 136

    References 136

    7 Manganese Toxicity and Tolerance in Photosynthetic Organisms and Breeding Strategy for Improving Manganese Tolerance in Crop Plants: Physiological and Omics Approach Perspectives 141
    Daisuke Takagi

    7.1 Introduction 141

    7.2 The Change in Mn Availability Within the Soil 143

    7.3 Why Should We Consider the Occurrence of Mn Toxicity in Plants? Possible Threats of Mn Toxicity in Agricultural Land 144

    7.4 The History of Mn Toxicity 146

    7.5 The Features of Mn Toxicity in Terrestrial Plants and Possible Molecular Mechanisms 147

    7.5.1 The Mechanisms of Emergence of Brownish Patchy Spots in Leaves: The Apoplastic Mn Toxicity 147

    7.5.2 The Mechanisms of Foliar Chlorosis Under Excess Mn: Symplastic Mn Toxicity 150

    7.6 Breeding Strategy for Overcoming the Future Threat of Excess Mn Conditions 154

    7.6.1 Limiting Mn Absorption from Soil to Root 155

    7.6.2 Sequestration of Mn from Cytosol to the Vacuole or Apoplast 156

    7.6.3 Maintenance of Auxin Homeostasis 157

    7.6.4 The Reinforcement of Silicon Uptake and Its Distribution 157

    7.7 Conclusion and Future Prospects 158

    Acknowledgments 158

    References 158

    8 Iron Excess Toxicity and Tolerance in Crop Plants: Insights from Omics Studies 169
    May Sann Aung and Hiroshi Masuda

    8.1 Iron Uptake and Translocation Mechanism in Plants 169

    8.1.1 Importance of Iron in Living Organisms 169

    8.1.2 Fe Acquisition Systems in Plants 170

    8.1.3 Fe Translocation Mechanisms in Plants 171

    8.2 Fe Excess Toxicity in Plants 171

    8.2.1 Fe Excess Toxicity in Global Agriculture 171

    8.2.2 Causes of Fe Excess Toxicity in Soils and Its Interaction with Plants 172

    8.2.2.1 State of Fe in Soils and Soil pH Effects on Fe Excess Toxicity 172

    8.2.2.2 Soil Improvement Methods to Ameliorate Fe Excess Toxicity 173

    8.2.2.3 Soil Water and Drainage Effects on Fe Excess Toxicity 173

    8.2.3 Effects of Fe Excess Toxicity on Plant Growth 174

    8.3 Crop Defense Mechanisms Against Excess Fe and Genes Regulating Fe Excess 175

    8.3.1 Defense I: Fe Exclusion from Roots 175

    8.3.1.1 Genes Involved in Defense I 176

    8.3.2 Defense II: Fe Retention in Roots and Suppression of Fe Translocation to Shoots 177

    8.3.3 Defense III: Fe Compartmentalization in Shoots 177

    8.3.3.1 Genes Involved in Defense II and IIi 178

    8.3.3.2 Role of YSL4 and YSL6 Transporters in Preventing Fe Excess in Early Plant Development 179

    8.3.4 Defense IV: ROS Detoxification 179

    8.3.4.1 Genes Involved in Defense IV 180

    8.3.4.2 GLY1 as a Detoxifying Agent 180

    8.4 Research Outlook on Fe Excess Response of Plants 180

    8.4.1 Regulation of Fe homeostasis in Plants in Response to Fe Excess Stress 180

    8.4.2 Transcription Factors 181

    8.4.3 Cis-Regulatory Elements 182

    8.5 Conclusion and Future Prospects 183

    Acknowledgments 183

    Author Contributions 183

    Disclosures 183

    References 183

    9 Molecular Breeding for Iron Toxicity Tolerance in Rice (Oryza sativa L.) 191
    Dorothy A. Onyango, Mathew M. Dida, Khady N. Drame, Benson O. Nyongesa, and Kayode A. Sanni

    9.1 Introduction 191

    9.2 Role of Iron in Plants and Rice 192

    9.3 Iron Toxicity and Its Effects on Rice 192

    9.4 Iron Toxicity Tolerance Mechanisms in Rice Plants 193

    9.4.1 Fe Exclusion from Roots 193

    9.4.2 Fe Retention in Roots and Suppression of Fe Translocation to Shoots 194

    9.4.3 Fe Compartmentalization in Shoots 194

    9.4.4 ROS Detoxification 195

    9.4.5 Candidate Genes Involved in the Mechanisms of Fe Toxicity 196

    9.4.6 Genetic Variants for Iron Toxicity Tolerance in Rice Germplasm 197

    9.5 Molecular Breeding for Fe Toxicity Tolerance in Rice 197

    9.6 Conclusion 200

    References 202

    10 Cobalt Induced Toxicity and Tolerance in Plants: Insights from Omics Approaches 207
    Abdul Salam, Muhammad Siddique Afridi, Ali Raza Khan, Wardah Azhar, Yang Shuaiqi, Zaid Ulhassan, Jiaxuan Qi, Nu Xuo, Yang Chunyan, Nana Chen, and Yinbo Gan

    10.1 Introduction 207

    10.2 Plant Response to Cobalt Stress 208

    10.2.1 Uptake and Translocation of Cobalt in Plants 209

    10.3 Cobalt-Induced ROS Generation and Their Damaging Effects 211

    10.3.1 ROS-Induced Lipid Peroxidation 211

    10.3.2 ROS-Induced Damage to Genetic Material 212

    10.4 Cobalt-Induced Plant Antioxidant Defense System 213

    10.4.1 Enzymatic Antioxidants 213

    10.4.1.1 Superoxide Dismutase (SOD) 213

    10.4.1.2 Catalases (CAT) 213

    10.4.1.3 Glutathione Peroxidases (GPX) 214

    10.4.1.4 Glutathione Reductase (GR) 214

    10.4.2 Nonenzymatic Antioxidants 215

    10.4.2.1 Ascorbic Acid 215

    10.4.2.2 Tocopherols 215

    10.4.2.3 Reduced Glutathione (GSH) 216

    10.5 Omics Approaches in Cobalt Stress Tolerance 216

    10.5.1 Transcriptomic 216

    10.5.2 Metabolomics 218

    10.5.3 Proteomics 219

    10.6 Conclusion and Future Prospects 220

    Acknowledgments 221

    References 221

    11 Nickel Toxicity and Tolerance in Plants 231
    Sondes Helaoui, Marouane Mkhinini, Iteb Boughattas, Noureddine Bousserrhine, and Mohamed Banni

    11.1 Introduction 231

    11.2 Sources of Ni 232

    11.2.1 Natural Sources of Ni 232

    11.2.2 Anthropogenic Sources of Ni 233

    11.3 Role of Ni in Plants 233

    11.4 Ni Uptake and Accumulation in Plants 233

    11.5 Ni Toxicity in Plants 234

    11.5.1 Growth Inhibition 234

    11.5.2 Photosynthesis Inhibition of Ni 236

    11.5.3 Induction of Oxidative Stress 236

    11.6 Tolerance Mechanisms 237

    11.7 Omics Approaches in Ni Stress Tolerance 238

    11.7.1 Transcriptomics 238

    11.7.2 Proteomics 239

    11.7.3 Metabolomics 240

    11.8 Conclusion 240

    References 241

    12 Copper Toxicity and Tolerance in Plants: Insights from Omics Studies 251
    Moreira A, Moraes LAC, Delfim JJ, and Moreti LG

    12.1 Introduction 251

    12.2 Copper in Plants 253

    12.2.1 Functions of Copper 253

    12.2.2 Uptake, Transport, Distribution, and Remobilization Mechanisms 255

    12.2.3 Deficient, Sufficient, and Toxic Levels of Copper in Plants 255

    12.2.4 Copper Sources: Fertilizers and Fungicides 256

    12.3 Omics Approaches for Cu Responses and Tolerance in Plants 259

    12.3.1 Genomics 259

    12.3.2 Transcriptomics 259

    12.3.3 Proteomics 261

    12.3.4 Metabolomics 263

    12.3.5 miRNAomics 264

    12.4 Concluding Remarks 266

    Acknowledgments 266

    References 267

    13 Zinc Toxicity and Tolerance in Plants: Insights from Omics Studies 275
    Imran Haider Shamsi, Qichun Zhang, Zhengxin Ma, Sibgha Noreen, Muhammad Salim Akhter, Ummar Iqbal, Muhammad Faheem Adil, Muhammad Fazal Karim, and Najeeb Ullah

    13.1 Introduction 275

    13.1.1 Zinc Uptake and Translocation Mechanisms in Plants 275

    13.1.2 Transporters and Metal-Binding Compounds Involved in Zinc Homeostasis 277

    13.2 Impact of Excess Zinc on Physio-genetics Aspects of Plants 277

    13.2.1 Effect of Zinc Toxicity on Seed Germination and Growth of Plants 278

    13.2.2 Effect of Zinc Toxicity on Oxidative Metabolism in Plants 279

    13.2.3 Effect of Zn Toxicity on Physiology and Biochemistry of Plants 280

    13.3 Plants Stress Adaptation to Zinc Toxicity 281

    13.4 Multi-omics Approaches for Zinc Toxicity and Tolerance in Plants 281

    13.4.1 Genomics and Metabolomics 281

    13.4.2 Proteomics and Transcriptomics 283

    13.4.3 miRNA Omics and CRISPR/Cas9 System 284

    13.4.4 Quantitative Trait Locus Mapping and Genome-Wide Association Study 286

    13.5 Conclusion and Future Prospective 286

    Acknowledgments 286

    References 287

    14 Arsenic Toxicity and Tolerance in Plants: Insights from Omics Studies 293
    Barsha Majumder, Palin Sil, and Asok K. Biswas

    14.1 Introduction 293

    14.2 Occurrence and Distribution of As in the Environment 295

    14.3 Arsenic Uptake, Accumulation, and Detoxification in Plants 296

    14.3.1 Uptake of Inorganic Arsenic 296

    14.3.2 Uptake of Methylated Arsenic 297

    14.3.3 Arsenic Accumulation and Detoxification 297

    14.3.4 Arsenic Methylation and Volatilization 298

    14.4 Influence of Arsenic on Phytotoxicity 298

    14.4.1 Germination and Growth 298

    14.4.2 Nutrient Uptake 299

    14.4.3 Oxidative Stress and Antioxidative Defense 299

    14.4.4 Ascorbate-Glutathione Cycle 300

    14.4.5 Photosynthesis 300

    14.4.6 Respiration 301

    14.4.7 Carbohydrate Metabolism 302

    14.4.8 Nitrogen Metabolism 302

    14.5 Modulation in "Omics" Profiling Under As Challenged Environment 303

    14.5.1 Genomic Profiling 303

    14.5.2 Transcriptomic Profiling 304

    14.5.3 Proteomic Profiling 307

    14.5.4 Metabolomic Profiling 308

    14.6 Progress in Molecular Biotechnology to Evolve As-Tolerant Plants 308

    14.7 Conclusion and Future Perspective 311

    Acknowledgment 311

    Author Contributions 312

    References 312

    15 Selenium Toxicity and Tolerance in Plants: Insights from Omics Studies 323
    Ali K¿yak, Selman Ulüs¿k, Ertugrul Filiz, and Firat Kurt

    15.1 Introduction 323

    15.2 Selenium Toxicity in Plants 324

    15.2.1 Se-Induced Protein Malformation 324

    15.2.2 ROS-Induced Se Phytotoxicity 325

    15.3 Selenium Tolerance in Plants 326

    15.4 Selenium Biofortification in Plants 328

    15.5 Conclusion 329

    References 330

    16 Breeding for Rice Cultivars with Low Cadmium Accumulation 335
    li Tang, Yaokui li, Yan Peng, Bigang Mao, Ye Shao, Zhongying Ji, and Bingran Zhao

    16.1 Introduction 335

    16.2 Molecular Mechanisms of Cd Accumulation in Rice 335

    16.2.1 Cd Uptake 336

    16.2.2 Radial Transport and Xylem Loading 338

    16.2.3 Distribution of Cd in Shoots 338

    16.3 Transgenic Approach for Breeding Low-Cd Rice 339

    16.3.1 Traditional Transgenic Technology 339

    16.3.2 Genome-Editing Technology 340

    16.4 Mutation Breeding for Low-Cd Rice Cultivars 341

    16.5 Molecular Marker-Assisted Breeding for Low-Cd Rice Cultivars 342

    16.6 Future Perspectives 343

    References 344

    17 Mercury Toxicity: Plant Response and Tolerance 349
    Arifin Sandhi, Abu Bakar Siddique, and Meththika Vithanage

    17.1 Introduction 349

    17.2 Global Mercury Pollution 350

    17.3 Mercury Uptake and Toxicity in Plants 352

    17.4 Existence of Differential Plant Response to Hg Stress 353

    17.4.1 Plant Morphological Responses 353

    17.4.2 Plant Anatomical Responses 354

    17.4.3 Cellular Responses 354

    17.4.4 Plant Photosynthetic Response 355

    17.4.5 Enzymatic and Metabolic Responses 355

    17.4.6 Plant Hormonal Responses 356

    17.4.7 Reactive Oxygen Species and Oxidative Responses 356

    17.5 Plant Tolerance Mechanisms 357

    17.5.1 Chelation 357

    17.5.2 Enzymatic and Antioxidative Tolerance 358

    17.5.3 Hormonal Regulations 359

    17.5.4 miRNA-Mediated Tolerance 360

    17.6 Phytoremediation Prospects 360

    17.7 Conclusion 361

    References 362

    18 Lead Toxicity and Tolerance in Plants: Insights from Omics Studies 373
    Sayyeda Hira Hassan, Yassine Chafik, Manhattan Lebrun, Gabriella Sferra, Sylvain Bourgerie, Gabriella Stefania Scippa, Domenico Morabito, and Dalila Trupiano

    18.1 Introduction 373

    18.2 Omics' Contribution in Uncovering Molecular Alterations in Plants Under Pb Exposure 375

    18.3 Genetics and Epigenetics Regulations of Pb Toxicity and Tolerance 380

    18.4 The Role of Plant Cell Wall, Cell Signaling, and Transduction 382

    18.5 Pb-Binding Proteins/Transporters and Their Involvement in Tolerance 384

    18.6 Pb-Induced Oxidative Stress and Antioxidative Mechanisms 385

    18.7 Metabolic Pathways Associated with Pb Tolerance 388

    18.7.1 Sugar/Carbohydrate and Energy Metabolic Pathway 388

    18.7.2 Phenylpropanoid Pathway 389

    18.7.3 Sulfur-Related Pathway and Phytohormones 390

    18.8 Conclusion and Future Perspective 392

    References 394

    19 Interaction of Heavy Metal with Drought/Salinity Stress in Plants 407
    Ziqian Li, Wentao Chen, Qianlong Tan, Yuanyuan Hou, Taimoor Hassan Farooq, Baber Iqbal, and Yong li

    19.1 Introduction 407

    19.2 Plant Physiology and Biochemistry 409

    19.2.1 Zinc (Zn) 409

    19.2.2 Cadmium (Cd) 410

    19.2.3 Aluminium (Al) 411

    19.2.4 Other Metals 412

    19.3 Photosynthesis 413

    19.4 Antioxidant System 414

    19.5 Conclusions and Prospects 415

    Acknowledgments 416

    References 416

    20 Hormonal Regulation of Heavy Metal Toxicity and Tolerance in Crop Plants 425
    Éderson Akio Kido, Gizele de Andrade Luz, Valquíria da Silva, Maria Fernanda da Costa Gomes, and José Ribamar Costa Ferreira Neto

    20.1 Introduction 425

    20.2 General Aspects of Plants Under HM Stress 426

    20.3 Phytohormone-Mediating Plant Response to HM Stress 427

    20.3.1 Abscisic Acid 430

    20.3.2 Auxin 432

    20.3.3 Brassinosteroid 434

    20.3.4 Cytokinin 435

    20.3.5 Ethylene 437

    20.3.6 Gibberellin 438

    20.3.7 Jasmonate 439

    20.3.8 Melatonin (MT) 440

    20.3.9 Salicylic Acid (SA) 442

    20.3.10 Strigolactone (SL) 444

    20.4 Crosstalk of Phytohormones in Plants Responding to Heavy Metals 445

    20.5 Final Considerations 447

    References 448

    21 Heavy-Metal-Induced Reactive Oxygen Species and Methylglyoxal Formation

    and Detoxification in Crop Plants: Modulation of Tolerance by Exogenous Chemical Compounds 461
    Beatrycze Nowicka, Tahsina Sharmin Hoque, Sheikh Mahfuja Khatun, Jannatul Naim, Ahmed Khairul Hasan, and Mohammad Anwar Hossain

    21.1 Introduction 461

    21.2 Heavy-Metal-Induced ROS and Methylglyoxal Production in Plant Cells 464

    21.3 Detoxification of ROS and Methylglyoxal in Plant Cells 468

    21.4 Exogenous Chemical-Compounds-Mediated Heavy Metal/Metalloid Tolerance in Crop Plants 473

    21.5 Conclusions and Future Perspectives 484

    References 486

    22 Biochar Amendments in Soils and Heavy Metal Tolerance in Crop Plants 493
    Agnieszka Medy¿ska-Juraszek and Bhakti Jadhav

    22.1 Introduction 493

    22.2 Heavy Metal Immobilization Mechanisms on Biochar 495

    22.2.1 Heavy Metal Immobilization Through Soil pH Modification 496

    22.3 Biochar Interactions Through Rhizosphere 496

    22.3.1 Effect on Plant Root Development 497

    22.3.2 Changes in Elements Uptake from Rhizosphere 498

    22.4 Biochar-Induced Plant Respond to Metal Stress 499

    22.4.1 Biochar Induces Changes in Photosynthetic Activity 499

    22.4.2 Biochar Induces Changes in Antioxidant and Phytohormone Activity 499

    22.4.3 Biochar as a Source of Specific Chemical Compounds Affecting Heavy Metal Uptake By Plants 501

    22.5 Effect of Biochar on Heavy Metal Concentrations in Different Crops 503

    22.6 Effect of Biochar Type on Heavy Metal Immobilization 503

    References 504

    23 Plant-Growth-Promoting Rhizobacteria and Their Metabolites: Clean and Green Approaches to Deal with Heavy Metal Toxicity 513
    Imtinen Sghaier, Ameur Cherif, and Mohamed Neifar

    23.1 Introduction 513

    23.2 Chemical Fertilizers and Their Impacts 515

    23.2.1 Impacts of Chemical Fertilizers on Atmospheric Ecosystem 515

    23.2.2 Impacts of Chemical Fertilizers on Aquatic Ecosystem 515

    23.2.3 Impacts of Chemical Fertilizers on Soil 515

    23.2.4 Impacts of Chemical Fertilizers on Plants 516

    23.3 PGPR and Biofertilization Traits 516

    23.3.1 Acquisition of Nutrients 516

    23.3.2 Production of Siderophores 517

    23.3.3 Production of Exopolysaccharides 517

    23.4 Resistance to Abiotic Stress 518

    23.5 Biostimulation Potential and PGPR 519

    23.6 Biocontrol Potential and PGPR 520

    23.7 PGPR and Heavy Metal Bioremediation 521

    23.8 Conclusion and Future Prospects 524

    Acknowledgments 525

    References 525

    24 Applications of Nanotechnology for Improving Heavy Metal Stress Tolerance in Crop Plants 533
    Meng Jiang, Yue Song, Mukesh Kumar Kanwar, and Jie Zhou

    24.1 Introduction 533

    24.2 Impacts of NPs on the HM Stress in Plants 535

    24.2.1 Silicon 535

    24.2.2 Selenium 535

    24.2.3 Iron 536

    24.2.4 Zinc Oxide 537

    24.2.5 Titanium Dioxide 537

    24.2.6 Cerium Dioxide 538

    24.3 Mechanisms of NPs to Mitigate the Toxicity of HM 539

    24.4 Summary and Prospect 543

    References 545

    25 The Dynamics of Phytoremediation of Heavy Metals: Recent Progress and Future Perspective 553
    Imran Haider Shamsi, Xiaoli Jin, Xin Zhang, Qidong Feng, Zakir Ibrahim, Muhammad Faheem Adil, Muhammad Fazal Karim, and Najeeb Ullah

    25.1 Introduction 553

    25.1.1 Types of Phytoremediation 554

    25.1.1.1 Phytostabilization 554

    25.1.1.2 Phytovolatalization 554

    25.1.1.3 Phytoextraction 554

    25.1.2 Modified Concept 555

    25.1.2.1 Chemical-Assisted Phytoremediation Employing Non-hyperaccumulator Plants 556

    25.1.2.2 Biochar-Assisted Phytoremediation 556

    25.1.2.3 Microbial-Assisted Phytoremediation 557

    25.2 Importance of Phytoremediation 557

    25.3 Role of Phytoremediation as a Sustainable Solution 558

    25.4 Biophilic Design as Phytoremediation in Urban Sustainability 559

    25.4.1 Eco-Design 559

    25.4.2 Biophilic Design 559

    25.4.2.1 Hypothesis of Biophilic 562

    25.4.2.2 Dimensions of Biophilic Design 562

    25.4.2.3 Direct Experience of Nature 562

    25.4.2.4 Indirect Experience of Nature 563

    25.4.2.5 Experience of Place and Space 563

    25.4.2.6 Sustainable Biophilic Cities 563

    25.4.3 Health Benefits 564

    25.4.4 Biophilic as an Antidepressant in Urban Environment 565

    25.4.5 Economic Benefits 566

    25.4.6 Sustainability and Resilience 566

    25.5 Conclusion 567

    25.6 Future Perspective 568

    Acknowledgment 569

    References 569

    26 Genetic Engineering for Heavy Metal/Metalloid Stress Tolerance in Plants 573
    Mohammad Anwar Hossain, Md. Tahjib-Ul-Arif , Sopnil Ahmed Jahin, Abu Bakar Siddique, Mumtarin Haque Mim, Sharif-Ar-Raffi, Muhammad Javidul Haque Bhuiyan, and Beatrycze Nowicka

    26.1 Introduction 573

    26.2 Mechanisms of Heavy Metal/Metalloid Tolerance in Plants 574

    26.3 Strategies for Improving Metal/Metalloid Stress Tolerance in Plants 576

    26.4 Transgenic Plants and Heavy Metal/Metalloid Stress Tolerance in Plants 577

    26.4.1 Sulfur Metabolism Engineering and Heavy Metal Tolerance 577

    26.4.2 Glyoxalase Pathway Genes and Heavy Metal Stress Tolerance 577

    26.4.3 Enhanced Antioxidant Defense and Heavy Metal Tolerance 579

    26.4.4 Phytochelatin and Metallothionein Genes and Heavy Metal Tolerance 579

    26.4.5 Metal Ion Transporter Genes/Proteins and Heavy Metal Stress Tolerance 579

    26.5 CRISPR/Cas System and Heavy Metal Tolerance Development 585

    26.6 Conclusions and Future Prospects 585

    Acknowledgment 586

    References 586

    Index 593