Articolo in rivista, 2020, ENG, 10.1007/s10725-020-00664-7
Vannucchi, Francesca; Traversari, Silvia; Raffaelli, Andrea; Francini, Alessandra; Sebastiani, Luca
Scuola Super Sant Anna; CNR
Mixed inorganic and organic contaminations are one of the main challenges in phytoremediation, due to the higher complexity derived by pollutant interactions and the increase of phytotoxicity. The cultivation of fast-growing poplars for removing contaminants from water could be a low-cost and flexible choice. The main objective of this study was to evaluate the tolerance of a poplar species (Populus alba'Villafranca' clone) to irrigation with water contaminated with zinc (Zn) and caffeine (CFN). Poplars were maintained in hydroponic and exposed to four different treatments (Control, CFN, Zn and Zn + CFN) over 7 days. Poplar showed a good tolerance to Zn and CFN treatments, without any symptom of phytotoxicity. However, the type of treatment affected the contaminant dynamics in the plant-water system and a pollutant partitioning was observed among organs, with a higher accumulation of Zn in root (472 +/- 128.7 mg kg(- 1)DW) and CFN in shoot (30 +/- 4.5 mu g g(- 1)FW). Under mixed condition, the CFN uptake significantly increased in root (+ 40%) and stem (+ 28%) while the Zn concentration decreased in leaves (-19%). A focus on the potential role of natural resistance-associated macrophage proteins (NRAMPs) in divalent metal transport has been performed. A down-regulation ofNRAMP1.3was detected in roots of plants exposed to CFN treatment in relation to an increase of Mn concentration. Data confirmed the suitability ofPopulus albafor the remediation of multi contaminated water.
Plant growth regulation (Print) 92 (3), pp. 597–606
Caffeine, Multi contamination, Nutrient, NRAMP, Populus alba'Villafranca' clone, Zinc
ID: 446452
Year: 2020
Type: Articolo in rivista
Creation: 2021-02-27 18:16:57.000
Last update: 2021-02-27 18:16:57.000
CNR authors
External IDs
CNR OAI-PMH: oai:it.cnr:prodotti:446452
DOI: 10.1007/s10725-020-00664-7
ISI Web of Science (WOS): 000570503100001