4.7 Article

Arsenic (As) oxidation by core endosphere microbiome mediates As speciation in Pteris vittata roots

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 454, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2023.131458

Keywords

Arsenic; Root endophyte; Arsenite oxidation; Pteris vittata

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This study aims to characterize the root endophytic community composition and As-metabolizing potentials in P. vittata. Results showed that microbial As(III) oxidation was the dominant As-biotransformation process in P. vittata roots, and members of Rhizobiales were the core microbiome and the dominant As(III) oxidizers.
Pteris vittata is an arsenic(As)-hyperaccumulator that may be employed in phytoremediation of As-contaminated soils. P. vittata-associated microbiome are adapted to elevated As and may be important for host survival under stresses. Although P. vittata root endophytes could be critical for As biotransformation in planta, their compositions and metabolisms remain elusive. The current study aims to characterize the root endophytic community composition and As-metabolizing potentials in P. vittata. High As(III) oxidase gene abundances and rapid As(III) oxidation activity indicated that As(III) oxidation was the dominant microbial As-biotransformation processes compared to As reduction and methylization in P. vittata roots. Members of Rhizobiales were the core microbiome and the dominant As(III) oxidizers in P. vittata roots. Acquasition of As-metabolising genes, including both As(III) oxidase and As(V) detoxification reductase genes, through horizontal gene transfer was identified in a Saccha-rimonadaceae genomic assembly, which was another abundant population residing in P. vittata roots. Acquisition of these genes might improve the fitness of Saccharimonadaceae population to elevated As concentrations in P. vittata. Diverse plant growth promoting traits were encoded by the core root microbiome populations Rhi-zobiales. We propose that microbial As(III) oxidation and plant growth promotion are critical traits for P. vittata survival in hostile As-contaiminated sites.

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