4.7 Article

Phytoextraction efficiency of Pteris vittata grown on a naturally As-rich soil and characterization of As-resistant rhizosphere bacteria

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-86076-7

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Funding

  1. Regione Lazio [85-2017 FONDI LISPA 15067 CUP B56C18000870002, L.r. 13/2008]

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The fern Pteris vittata has demonstrated effective phytoextraction of arsenic from a natural arsenic-rich soil, reaching a high concentration of arsenic in its fronds within 5.5 months. The bacterial consortium found in the rhizosphere of P. vittata is different from those typically found in arsenic-polluted soils, with strains exhibiting high arsenic resistance and the presence of arsenate reductase genes.
This study evaluated the phytoextraction capacity of the fern Pteris vittata grown on a natural arsenic-rich soil of volcanic-origin from the Viterbo area in central Italy. This calcareous soil is characterized by an average arsenic concentration of 750 mg kg(-1), of which 28% is bioavailable. By means of micro-energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (mu -XRF) we detected As in P. vittata fronds after just 10 days of growth, while a high As concentrations in fronds (5,000 mg kg(-1)), determined by Inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES), was reached after 5.5 months. Sixteen arsenate-tolerant bacterial strains were isolated from the P. vittata rhizosphere, a majority of which belong to the Bacillus genus, and of this majority only two have been previously associated with As. Six bacterial isolates were highly As-resistant (>100 mM) two of which, homologous to Paenarthrobacter ureafaciens and Beijerinckia fluminensis, produced a high amount of IAA and siderophores and have never been isolated from P. vittata roots. Furthermore, five isolates contained the arsenate reductase gene (arsC). We conclude that P. vittata can efficiently phytoextract As when grown on this natural As-rich soil and a consortium of bacteria, largely different from that usually found in As-polluted soils, has been found in P. vittata rhizosphere.

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