Ectomycorrhizal fungal strains facilitate cd2+ enrichment in a woody hyperaccumulator under co-existing stress of cadmium and salt

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Abstract

Cadmium (Cd2+ ) pollution occurring in salt-affected soils has become an increasing environmental concern in the world. Fast-growing poplars have been widely utilized for phytoreme-diation of soil contaminating heavy metals (HMs). However, the woody Cd2+-hyperaccumulator, Populus × canescens, is relatively salt-sensitive and therefore cannot be directly used to remediate HMs from salt-affected soils. The aim of the present study was to testify whether colonization of P. × canescens with ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungi, a strategy known to enhance salt tolerance, provides an opportunity for affordable remediation of Cd2+-polluted saline soils. Ectomycorrhization with Paxillus involutus strains facilitated Cd2+ enrichment in P. × canescens upon CdCl2 exposures (50 µM, 30 min to 24 h). The fungus-stimulated Cd2+ in roots was significantly restricted by inhibitors of plasmalemma H+-ATPases and Ca2+-permeable channels (CaPCs), but stimulated by an activator of plasmalemma H+-ATPases. NaCl (100 mM) lowered the transient and steady-state Cd2+ influx in roots and fungal mycelia. Noteworthy, P. involutus colonization partly reverted the salt suppression of Cd2+ uptake in poplar roots. EM fungus colonization upregulated transcription of plasmalemma H+-ATPases (PcHA4, 8, 11) and annexins (PcANN1, 2, 4), which might mediate Cd2+ conductance through CaPCs. EM roots retained relatively highly expressed PcHAs and PcANNs, thus facilitating Cd2+ enrichment under co-occurring stress of cadmium and salinity. We conclude that ectomycor-rhization of woody hyperaccumulator species such as poplar could improve phytoremediation of Cd2+ in salt-affected areas.

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Deng, C., Zhu, Z., Liu, J., Zhang, Y., Zhang, Y., Yu, D., … Chen, S. (2021). Ectomycorrhizal fungal strains facilitate cd2+ enrichment in a woody hyperaccumulator under co-existing stress of cadmium and salt. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 22(21). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222111651

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