1. Introduction
The accelerated population growth and the rapid urbanization, along with flourishing industrialization, have improved the living standards; however, as a consequence, an array of harmful pollutants (e.g., pesticides, hydrocarbon, heavy metals (HMs), microplastics) have been released and compromised the environmental quality (soil, air, and water) [1,2]. Due to their physicochemical properties, such as ubiquity, non-biodegradability, toxicity, accumulation, and persistence, HMs pollution has attracted much attention worldwide and has led to the recognition and understanding of the bond between HM contamination and public health [3]. Human socioeconomic and development activities, such as mining, smelting, fuel and energy use, long-term use of mineral fertilizers and pesticides, sewage sludge, and wastewater disposal, are the primary sources of HM contamination [3,4]. HM soil pollution has led to: (i) damage to soil quality and fertility, (ii) loss of microbial biodiversity, (iii) destruction of the vegetal cover, and (iv) a reduction of crop production and quality [5,6]. However, microorganisms and plants have developed morphological, physiological, metabolic, and molecular traits to cope with HM toxicity, and these traits could be used to remediate soil contaminated with HMs [7,8].
Several techniques have been deployed to remediate HMs in soils and restore soil characteristics as close as possible to pre-pollution conditions, including physical, chemical, and biological strategies [3]. The appropriate remediation strategies depend on the site characteristics, contamination degree, type of contaminants, and the final use of the contaminated soil. In general, the physicochemical techniques unduly focus on removing and stabilizing HMs in the soil [3]. Metal remediation through standard physicochemical techniques is simple, fast, efficient, and operative; however, these techniques are expensive, unsuitable for large contaminated areas, energy requirements, generate significant amounts of toxic sludge, and are not practical with a low metals content nor are they environmentally friendly [7,8]. In addition, these techniques may deteriorate the soil’s physicochemical characteristics and hamper its microbial biodiversity, which renders the soil unsuitable for agriculture and other uses [3,8]. To tackle these issues and efficiently remediate soils contaminated with HMs, scientists have established alternative biological-based strategies encompassing techniques that use microorganisms and techniques that exploit the plant properties [3,8,9]. Microbial remediation involves using microorganisms (e.g., bacteria, microalgae, yeast) to remove/immobilize, transform, or detoxify HMs from the environment [10,11,12,13]. While in phytoremediation, the use of plants and associated soil microbes involves the extraction, stabilization, and volatilization of HMs from the contaminated substrates [14,15,16]. The biological strategies exploit the mechanisms used by endogenous or exogenous microorganisms or plants to cope with HMs, such as extracellular/intracellular sequestration, production of metal chelators, precipitation, enzymatic detoxification, and volatilization, to remediate HM-contaminated environments [12,13,17,18,19]. These biological-based strategies are preferred over physicochemical ones because they are simple, easy to implement, could be adopted for large areas, reliable, cost-effective, less or non-destructive, and ecofriendly [3,8,9,20]. Nevertheless, there are still several bottlenecks in their wide application. Biological-based strategies depend on the type of microorganisms and plants used, their resistance, the level of contamination, and their soil physicochemical characteristics [3,8,9]. However, these limitations could be surpassed by designing new microbial and plant species that express specific genes of interest or combining microbial and/or phytoremediation with physicochemical strategies. Accordingly, this review addresses the accomplishment of plants’ uses and microorganisms’ application as tools for bioremediation of HM-contaminated environments. We also examine the recent developments and prospects for microbial remediation and phytoremediation of toxic pollutants.
2. Heavy Metals: An Alarming Threat to Soil and Environment
Environmental pollution is among the most critical environmental concerns and is considered to be one of the significant challenges in the modern era. Heavy metals (approximately 65 metals) are becoming the most threatening contaminants in the environment [21]. The term HMs refers to chemical elements with a density greater than 5 g/cm3 or specific gravity of at least five times greater than that of water and an atomic mass of over 20 u [21,22,23]. From a biological perspective, HMs could be classified into essential and toxic elements. Essential metals (in some cases metalloids) describe a series of plant and animal micronutrients, such as Zn, Fe, Ni, and Cu, but above certain thresholds, they become toxic [24]. In contrast, toxic elements are non-essential metals that are highly toxic even at low concentrations [20,23]. These metals (essential and non-essential) are omnipresent-trace elements in all the environmental compartments, but due to anthropogenic activities (i.e., urbanization, industrialization, mining, agriculture, and smelting), they accumulate in a particular site [25,26].
Due to their ubiquitous nature, not being biodegradable, toxicity, accumulation, and persistence, elevated HMs in soil and environment have been attracting much attention worldwide [27]. The adverse effects of HMs on soil physicochemical, biological, and biochemical properties are well-documented [5,27,28]. Moreover, the coexistence and persistence of HMs in the soil are also responsible for the entrance of toxic metals into the food chain, and thus lead to severe health hazards in living beings [25,29,30]. HMs drastically disorder soil horizons, soil structure, soil fertility, nutrient biogeochemical cycles, and soil microbial populations, destroying the existing soil vegetation and installing subsequent vegetal cover [6,31]. HMs indirectly affect soil enzymatic activities by altering the microbial community’s size, composition, and activity [32]. HMs exhibit toxic effects on the microbial community by affecting key microbial metabolic processes such as respiration, denitrification, and enzymatic activity [32,33,34]. HMs also cause a reduction in the number of specific microbial populations and a shift in the microbial community structure [32]. Furthermore, HMs inhibit microbial cell division, transcription, and protein denaturation and adversely affect cell membrane distribution [35]. The magnitude of the effects of metals on soil biological properties depends on several factors, including soil texture, clay contents, organic matter content, pH, inorganic anions and cations, and chemical forms and speciation of the metal [36].
HM pollution drastically affects soil quality and fertility and plant quality and yield. HMs severely hamper several biochemical and physiological processes in plants, such as seed germination, water balance, photosynthesis, electron transport system, stomatal conductance, as well as CO2 assimilation, antioxidant scavenging enzymes, solute accumulation, mineral nutrition, and stunted growth, and ultimately, these disorders could lead to plant death [31,37,38,39,40]. Moreover, high metal toxicity obstructs cytoplasmic enzymes in plant cells and causes damage to cell structures owing to oxidative stress, which consequently affects plant growth and metabolism [41,42]. The continued decline in plant growth reduces yield, leading to food insecurity.
HMs that have been extensively accumulated in soils could be infiltrated into other environmental compartments, such as groundwater, rivers, and crops, and therefore are menacing to human beings [43]. Researchers have demonstrated that HMs that surpass the permissible limits deteriorate water quality and make it unfit for drinking and irrigation purposes [44,45]. HMs enter the human body through direct ingestion or contact with a contaminated environment, the food chain, and drinking contaminated water [29,46]. Enduring levels of ingestion of these metals has a deleterious influence on humans, and the related dangerous impacts become noticeable after several years of exposure [29]. The toxicity degree of each metal is determined by the exposure duration and the absorbed dose.
The toxic effect of HMs and their permissible limits are listed below (Table 1).
Table 1Maximum permissible limits of heavy metals and other pollutants in irrigation water, soils, and vegetables [47].
Chemical Element (Contaminants) | Maximum Permissible Level in Irrigation Water (µg/mL) | Maximum Permissible Level in the Soil |
Maximum Permissible Level in Vegetables (µg/g) |
---|---|---|---|
As | 0.001 | 20 | - |
Cd | 0.0003 | 0.8 | 0.10 |
Co | 0.05 | 50 | 50 |
Cr | 0.55 | 100 | - |
Cu | 0.017 | 36 | - |
Fe | 0.02 | 50,000 | 425 |
Mn | 0.04 | 2000 | 500 |
Ni | 0.002 | 35 | 67 |
Pb | 0.001 | 85 | 0.30 |
Se | 0.02 | 10 | - |
Zn | 0.20 | 50 | 100 |
3. Current Bioremediation Technologies: Status, Pitfalls, and Drawbacks
With the rapid urbanization and industrialization around the world, the cases of soil contaminated by HMs have led to the recognition and understanding of the bond between environmental contamination and public health [3,29,45]. Thus, the overall objective of any soil remediation strategy is to restore the contaminated sites to a condition as close as possible to pre-pollution conditions, protect human health, and preserve a sustainable environment for future generations [3,4]. Generally, remediation of heavy metal-polluted soils is subjected to an array of regulatory requirements and could also be based on human health assessment and ecological risks [30,48]. Due to their long-term consequences to the environment, it is a worse scenario to leave HM-polluted soil un-remediated. The appropriate soil remediation techniques depend on the site characteristics, contamination degree, type of contaminants, and the final use of the contaminated soil [49]. The current remediation techniques adopted to solve the problem of soil contamination are based, generally, on two principles. The first is the complete removal of contaminants, and the second is the transformation of contaminants into less harmful forms using engineering technologies [4,8,50]. In situ and ex situ are the two approaches practiced for decontaminating soils affected by HMs [3,8,51]. Numerous physical, chemical, and biological clean-up techniques have been suggested, practiced, and evaluated for HMs’ remediation in contaminated or polluted areas [3,8]. Typically, the physicochemical clean-up techniques are equitably widespread. Although these techniques are seen as suitable for removing the HMs from the environment, they are challenging to apply, very expensive, not specific, not efficient in a particular situation, and can significantly alter the soil quality [7,8]. In this context, scientists developed new methods for the remediation of contaminated soils. Biotechnological methods are an emerging and innovative technology that demonstrates increasing opportunities for removal and restoration of HM-contaminated soils, as they are reliable, cheap, and feasible alternatives [3,8,9]. Hence, this review focuses on biotechnological remediation techniques, especially phytoremediation and microbial remediation.
Bioremediation is an innovative and promising waste management technique that uses living organisms to remove and neutralize contaminants [3,9,52]. Even though traditionally, bioremediation refers to the bacterial use (benchmark organisms) in the bioremediation process, nowadays, the bioremediation strategies are based on processes and the potential of almost all life forms. In addition to the ‘traditional’ microorganisms’ remediation, strategies including phytoremediation, mycoremediation, and zooremediation are emerging [8,9]. These organisms have developed and adopted different depolluting mechanisms such as biosorption, bioaccumulation, biotransformation, and biomineralization for their survival under HM-polluted soils, which could be used for ex situ or in situ bioremediation [9,13,19,32]. Ultimately, these organisms make the pollutant less toxic, immobilize it, or extract it [13,53]. These bioremediation strategies are preferred over other methods due to their cost-effectiveness and because they are less or non-destructive to the environment [8]. These bioremediation strategies are typically classified into two main categories: bioremediation techniques that exploit the plant properties and bioremediation techniques that use microorganisms.
3.1. Phytoremediation
A very promising solar-powered, low-cost, cost-effective, efficient, and green alternative technology is plant-based phytoremediation, which has already been used for years. The concept of phytoremediation was first introduced in 1983 [54]. Phytoremediation, also called agro-remediation, botano-remediation, or green remediation, is a generic term that refers to the use of plants to extract, reduce, transform, or immobilize contaminants (organic and inorganic) contained in soils, sediments, and groundwater [8,20,55]. Several plants can accumulate large quantities of metals in their vegetative and reproductive parts [6]. Phytoremediation appears to be the best approach to treat soils contaminated with low to medium metal levels and can be applied in combination with other traditional soil restoration approaches for effective contaminant removal [20,23,51,56]. The use of plants helps the concentration and/or degradation of soil pollutants and helps prevent erosion through the root network, thus limiting dispersal in the environment. They also make it possible to create a physicochemical environment favorable to developing the rhizospheric microflora capable of detoxifying the pollutants present in the soils [20,56,57].
Unlike physicochemical techniques, phytoremediation is environmentally friendly, inexpensive, and easier to implement. It can also be adopted in addition to physicochemical methods [31,58]. Phytoremediation technology of HM-contaminated soils is grouped into five sub-classes: phytoextraction, phytostabilization, phytovolatilization, phytotransformation, and phytofiltration [55,59] (Figure 1).
3.1.1. Different Phytoremediation Technologies Involving Contaminants’ Removal
Phytoextraction
Phytoextraction, also known as phytoaccumulation or phytoabsorption, one of the in situ strategies, refers to using hyperaccumulating plants that could uptake metals from the soil by their roots and accumulate them in their aerial parts (stems and leaves) [35,55,56]. Phytoextraction is considered an efficient approach to removing HMs from contaminated soils without altering soil fertility (Figure 1). Plants used for phytoextraction are expected to have fast growth, high biomass, extensive root network, easy cultivation, repulsion to herbivores, and support and store HMs at high levels [20,35,56]. After harvest, metals can also be recovered and reused for economic benefits (phytomining) by thermal, chemical, or microbiological processes [20,60]. Practically, most hyper-accumulative plants are identified to belong to the Brassicaceae [23,57]. Several plants, such as Brassica juncea, Thlaspi caerulescens, Pteris vittata, Haumaniastrum robertii, Aeolanthus biformifolius, Astragalus bisulcatus, and Arabis paniculate, are identified as hyperaccumulator plants based on their maximum level of HM accumulation [61].
Phytostabilization
Phytostabilization (or phytoimmobilization) is an emerging alternative strategy involving establishing a plant cover on contaminated media [20,55,56]. Phytostabilization refers to the use of plants to immobilize contaminants in the soil through accumulation by the roots, adsorption on the roots, or precipitation in the root zone (due to binding by organic compounds), rendering HMs less soluble, less available, and less harmful to the environment [16,55,59] (Figure 1). Notably, this strategy is not a clean-up technique, but instead, it reduces the mobility of the contaminants and avoids the risk of further environmental contamination. Plants employed in phytostabilization require (i) tolerance to high levels of toxic contaminants, (ii) an extensive root system, and (iii) low translocation of toxic contaminants from the roots to the shoots [20,62]. The plants accumulate small amounts of HMs in the above-ground parts to avoid their transfer into the food chain. Metal-tolerant plant species can also be used to restore the vegetal cover to these sites and decrease the spread of toxic contaminants by wind, soil surface erosion, and leaching to the groundwater [38,62,63]. Therefore, this technique ensures better landscape integration of the contaminated sites. Recently, several leguminous plant species have been successfully used in phytostabilization owing to their rapid growth, high biomass, high metal tolerance, high metal accumulation in the root system, and their capacity to form a symbiosis with rhizobacteria [38,58,64]. Seminal works demonstrated the phytostabilization strategies in several plants, including Medicago sativa, Vicia faba, Lens culinaris, Sulla coronaria, Trifolium repens, Acacia pycnantha, Mimosa caesalpiniaefolia, Erythrina speciose, and Schizolobium parahyba [38,65,66,67,68]. Medicago sativa shows potential for stabilizing mine tailings contaminated with Cu, Zn, and Pb [31,58]. However, this strategy allows only the unavailability of HMs to organisms, but HMs remain in the soil. This technique aims to contain HMs in the soil when the site is heavily contaminated and the phytoextraction method seems inefficient [20].
Phytovolatilization
Phytovolatilization refers to the plant uptake of toxic contaminants from soil, their transformation into volatile products, and their subsequent discharge into the atmosphere [16,56,60] (Figure 1). It relies on the use of specific plants which uptake toxic contaminants such as mercury, selenium, and arsenic, transforming them into volatile elements with little or no toxicity and releasing them into the atmosphere by evapotranspiration via the stomata, leaves, or stems [16,20,59]. Generally, the released compounds are less toxic than the soil compounds taken up by the roots [16]. The main advantage of this strategy is removing the contaminants from the soil, without harvesting the plant, compared to other cases [69]. In contrast, this strategy allows the complete clean-up of the toxic compounds from soil, but they are released into the atmosphere, where they might be redeposited [59,70]. Sakakibara et al. [71] demonstrated that the vapor released from the frond of P. vittata included arsenic, arsenite, and arsenate compounds. Their results suggest that P. vittata efficiently volatilizes As by eliminating ca. 90% of the accumulated As.
Phytotransformation
Phytotransformation or phytodegradation is limited to eliminating organic contaminants since HMs are not biodegradable [60,69]. Phytotransformation breaks down organic pollutants by using plants enzymes, and it does not depend on rhizospheric microorganisms [60,72] (Figure 1). Recently, Oladoye et al. [56] revealed plants’ capacity to degrade various organic pollutants, including pesticides, hydrocarbons, and chlorinated solvents. Enzymes suitable for phytodegradation are: (i) dehalogenase (transformation of chlorinated compounds), (ii) peroxidase (conversion of phenolic compounds), (iii) nitrilase (transformation of cyanated aromatic compounds), (iv) nitroreductase (conversion of explosives, e.g., 2,4,6-Trinitrotoluene (TNT), and other compounds), and (v) phosphating (transformation of organophosphate pesticides) [16,69]. Cyperus alternifolius has been found to degrade and remove ethanolamines from wastewater [73], while Armoracia rusticana can degrade benzophenone [74].
Phytofiltration
Phytofiltration refers to the approach that exploits plant biomass to remove contaminants, mainly HMs, from polluted water, effluent, and aqueous waste streams with a low level of contaminants [69,75,76]. Phytofiltration permits the removal of organic and inorganic pollutants from water by using plant roots (rhizofiltration), seedlings (blastofiltration), or plant shoots (caulofiltration) [76]. The ideal plant for phytofiltration should: (i) produce a substantial amount of root or shoot biomass, (ii) be able to accumulate and tolerate significant amounts of metals, (iii) have easy handling, (iv) grow under submerged conditions, and (v) have a minimum of secondary wastes that further require disposal [75,76]. In rhizofiltration, fast-growing terrestrial and aquatic plants can be used for the extraction of Pb, Cd, Ni, Cu, Cr, V, and radionuclides (uranium (U), caesium (Cs), and strontium (Sr)) [75,76]. Based on the pollutants’ nature, the rhizofiltration process may occur with phytoextraction, phytostabilization, or phytovolatilization processes [69]. Phytofiltration offers an economical and ecologic solution for the purification of wastewater.
3.1.2. Plant Mechanisms for Metal Detoxification
The plasma membrane, antioxidant system, intracellular chelation, and compartmentalization are the main mechanisms of plant tolerance and detoxification to HM stress [7,77,78] (Figure 2). The plasma membrane could play an essential role in the plant tolerance to HMs’ toxicity by limiting/reducing their uptake or modifying the ionic efflux [77,78]. HM homeostasis is mainly maintained by heavy metal ATPases (P1B–ATPase), natural resistance-associated macrophage protein (NRAMP), cation diffusion facilitator (CDF), and zinc-regulated transporters, iron-regulated transporter-like protein (ZIP) gene families’ transporters that are present on the plasma membrane [79] (Figure 2). Once in the cell, the HM accumulation at a particular stage of exposure leads to cell homeostasis disorder, affects DNA structure and function, causes damage to the chloroplast and pigments, and ultimately destroys the cell by producing reactive oxygen species (ROS) (e.g., O2·−, OH, RO2, and H2O2) [77]. The production of ROS can damage biomolecules such as lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids. Plants, in turn, use antioxidant enzymes, such as superoxide dismutases (SOD), catalases (CAT), peroxidases (POD), ascorbate peroxidase (APX), and glutathione reductase (GR), to scavenge ROS and reduce the oxidative damage caused during HMs’ oxidative stress [38,80]. One of the fundamental mechanisms of plant tolerance and detoxification of HMs is their chelation in the cytosol by specific ligands (Figure 2). Ligands such as organic acids, amino acids, phytochelatins, and metallothionein reduce HMs’ intracellular content and consequently their phytotoxicity [31,81]. Organic acids (fumaric, malic, oxalic, and citric acids) have been associated with HM tolerance in many plant species and have been recognized as critical cellular ligands for Zn, Cd, and Ni [81]. Indeed, these ligands are involved in the vacuole’s HM tolerance process, transport, and sequestration. Guo et al. [82] proved that the overproduction of organic acids (e.g., malate and succinate) is a response to excess cadmium uptake, and they act as a potential ligand of Cd, thereby reducing further damages. Amino acids (e.g., histidine, nicotianamine, and proline) have been described as HMs’ potential ligands in maize roots [77,79,83]. For instance, Kanwal et al. [83] showed an overproduction of proline by M. sativa during Zn and Cd exposure. As for microorganisms, the production of cytosolic polyphosphates and cysteine-rich proteins, including metallothionein, glutathione, and phytochelatins, which form insoluble metal precipitates, have been documented as a sequestration strategy in plants [79,84,85]. Talukder [85] has investigated the role of metallothionein and phytochelatins against Cu-induced oxidative stress in Solanum melongena. The results clearly showed that metallothionein and phytochelatins coordinate to detoxify HMs such as copper. Moreover, this study demonstrated that phytochelatins are more efficient HM chelators and detoxifiers than metallothionein and bind more HMs per cysteine residue. Cellular compartmentalization provides an effective strategy for HM tolerance and detoxification by removing HMs from the cell-sensitive sites (where cell division and respiration occur) to metabolically inactive cellular compartments, thus avoiding damage to the cell functions [77,79,86]. The vacuole represents the main inactive cellular compartment for HMs’ sequestration. Similarly, HMs can be sequestrated and compartmentalized into other locations, such as leaf petioles, sheaths, and trichomes [84,86].
3.1.3. Phytoremediation: Drawbacks and Future Application
Phytoremediation is an effective biological technique for removing HMs from the soil, having the advantage of being an in situ approach. The installation of the vegetal cover conserves the topsoil and soil structure, and therefore protects the soil integrity [20,57,87]. In addition, it is recognized as an economical choice compared to conventional options since it requires less excavation, less equipment, and less labor. Phytoremediation is an eco-friendly approach owing to its benign role in ecosystem restoration and naturally preserving the environment. The public widely accepts this strategy [20,57,87]. Several other advantages are attributed to this remediation technique, including (i) improvement of soil fertility, (ii) amount of residue generated, (iii) it could be used for a wide range of organic and inorganic contaminants, and (iv) its effectiveness under soil and water contamination. The installation of the vegetal cover on the contaminated environment reduces or prevents the contamination of the surrounding area or groundwater and could improve and maintain the landscape aesthetics [31,62].
Phytoremediation is a viable remediation technology by using plants, and associated soil microbes, to reduce the content, or toxic effects, of contaminants in the environment, but it is not a ‘silver bullet’ and is still developing. The major downside to this technology is its slow process, which takes months to years to completely clean up the contaminated site [51,62]. Another limitation of this technology is that the depth of the root system dictates the extent of remediation possible, making this technology efficient only for the area covered by the depth reached by the roots [87]. Moreover, plant biomass plays an essential role in the extent of metals extracted [51]. Practically, low-biomass plants are not efficient for stabilizing and extracting toxic contaminants. Besides, climatic conditions, soil physicochemical characteristics, and biotic stresses may restrict plant growth and thus the bioremediation process. Absorbed contaminants can also present a potential risk to animal and human health since they can enter the food network (thus, the biomass needs proper handling and disposal) [3,60,62,87]. Therefore, the phytoremediation areas must be protected to prevent animal access. The plant age also determines the success of the overall process. As young plants tend to take up more metals than older ones, it is crucial to maintain a healthy plant population in the target site throughout the process [51,88]. The presence of high levels of HMs in the soil can induce phytotoxicity, so the level of contaminants plays an essential role in the applicability of this technology [31]. In the phytoremediation process, it is preferred to use native plants since introduced plants might affect biodiversity. Additionally, phytoremediation depends on many factors, such as the bioavailability of metals in the soil, soil properties, metal speciation, and the plant species involved [31,51,87].
3.2. Plant-Associated Microbe’s Affair for Environmental Clean-Up
The plant–microorganisms’ interaction is another approach for the remediation of HM-contaminated soils. At the ground level, the rhizosphere and microorganisms from particular microbial communities establish a mutual relationship, thus helping plants cope with contaminants, including HMs, to remedy the environment [55,84,86]. Several microorganisms, including rhizobacteria, mycorrhizae, and yeast, have been proposed as target inoculants to improve plant growth, fitness, tolerance, performance, and the phytoremediation process [31,38,89] (Table 2).
Among microorganisms, plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) have considerable potential to improve phytoremediation efficiency. PGPR can promote plant growth and fitness, improve plant nutrient uptake, protect plants against various abiotic and biotic stresses, and improve soil fertility and structure [84,86,90,91]. This is achieved through various direct and indirect mechanisms, including atmospheric N fixation, P and K solubilization, phytohormone production, and 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate (ACC) deaminase (Figure 3) [92,93,94]. Phytohormones such as auxin and cytokinin can stimulate cell division, cell enlargement, apical dominance, lateral root initiation, root hair development, and plant growth [95]. PGPR can produce ACC deaminase, which cleaves ACC (ethylene precursor in plants). The production of the ACC deaminase decreases the level of ethylene in the plant, its inhibitory effect (especially root elongation and plant growth in general), and thus improves plant growth under HM-stressed conditions. PGPR with P solubilizing activity could withstand as a strategy to mitigate HM stress (Figure 3). Through these mechanisms, plants’ health, fitness, and robustness are improved, facilitating the adaptation of plants under HMs’ stressful conditions [86,92,95]. PGPR can contribute to the phytoremediation process through metals’ solubilization, siderophores, organic and biosurfactants production, reduction/oxidation, methylation, precipitation, and biosorption (see Section 3.4.2: Mechanism of heavy metal remediation by microorganisms) that affect the bioavailability of metals in soils and sediments [7,96]. Inoculation of M. sativa with a bacterial consortium composed of four bacterial strains: Proteus sp. DSP1, Pseudomonas sp. DSP17, and two Ensifer meliloti RhOL6 and RhOL8 strains, improved seed germination, plant early growth, physiology, and attenuated HM stress by reducing the antioxidant enzymes and HMs’ accumulation content, ultimately improving the phytostabilization process efficiency [38,39].
Mycorrhizae can facilitate the phytoremediation process by making metals more bio-available or reducing their uptake [63,97]. However, improving phytoremediation is highly variable depending on the fungal species and the ecotype [97,98]. Mycorrhizae contribute to phytoremediation by retaining HMs on fungal mycelium (as a physical barrier) and their immobilization in the soil by gloaming, reducing their bioavailability, translocation, and bioaccumulation in the plant tissues (Figure 3) [97,98]. The immobilization of metals in the fungal hyphae (by chelation and sequestration) is probably the primary protective mechanism conferred on plants by mycorrhizae [63,98]. Liu et al. [99] demonstrated that inoculation of maize culture with Glomus intraradices improves plant growth and reduces the amount of Cd transferred to the aerial part. In Nicotiana tabacum roots, Janoušková et al. [100] demonstrated that AMF extraradical mycelium could accumulate 10 to 20 times more Cd per biomass unit than non-mycorrhizal plants. Some studies have shown that fungal spores, arbuscules, and vesicles could be involved in the HMs’ storage, thereby constituting additional protective mechanisms against metal toxicity [101]. However, mycorrhizae can also contribute to phytoextraction by increasing metal bioavailability, transfer from soil to roots, and translocation from roots to shoots [98,101]. Extraradical mycelium provides an uptake pathway for the different metals through its plasma membrane [102]. Handa et al. [103] have demonstrated that 3641 genes were differentially expressed, of which ca. 80% were upregulated, during arbuscular mycorrhizal development in Lotus japonicus. The upregulated genes included secreted proteins, transporters, proteins involved in lipid and amino acid metabolism, ribosomes, and histones. Production of chelating agents and metal transformation, passive or active transport from fungal cells to plant cells, are the major mechanisms involved in mycorrhizae-assisted phytoextraction [101].
Table 2Microorganism-assisted phytoremediation of heavy metal (HM)-contaminated media.
Microbial Species | PGP Features | Plant | HMs | Main Results | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Proteus sp., Pseudomonas sp., |
IAA, Biofilm, |
M. sativa | Cu, Zn, Pb |
|
[31] |
Streptomyces sp. | IAA, ACCD, Zeatin, GA, P solubilization | Zea mays | As, Cr |
|
[37] |
Proteus sp., Pseudomonas sp., |
IAA, Biofilm, |
M. sativa | Cu, Zn, Pb |
|
[38] |
Aspergillus niger, Penicillium chrysosporium | ACCD, IAA, Gibberellins |
V. faba | Cd, Pb |
|
[41] |
Glomus mosseae, Sinorhizobium meliloti | n/s | M. sativa | Cd |
|
[42] |
Streptomyces pactum | n/s | Sorghum bicolor | Zn, Pb, Cd, Cu |
|
[80] |
Bacillus sp. | IAA, hydrolytic and ligninolytic enzymes, Siderophores | Phragmites communis | Fe, Cu, Zn, Cd, Mn, Ni, Pb, As |
|
[96] |
Acinetobacter lwoffii | IAA, ACCD, EPS, siderophore, |
Vigna radiata | As |
|
[104] |
Aliinostoc sp. | phosphatase production, |
Oryza sativa | Cd |
|
[105] |
Arthrobacter sp., |
ACCD, IAA, |
Brassica napus | Cd |
|
[106] |
Arthrobacter sp., Microbacterium oxydans | IAA, ACCD, siderophores | Noccaea caerulescens and |
Ni, Cu, Co, Mn, Fe |
|
[107] |
Bacillus cereus, Pseudomonas moraviensis | n/s | Triticum aestivum | Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Mn, Ni, Pb |
|
[108] |
B. cereus | IAA, siderophores | Zea mays | Cd, Cu, Ni, Pb, Zn |
|
[109] |
Bacillus licheniformis, Micrococcus luteus, Pseudomonas fluorescens | P solubilization, N fixation, siderophores | Vitis vinifera | As |
|
[110] |
Bacillus megaterium | IAA, arginine decarboxylase, siderophores | Brassica campestris and Brassica rapa | Cd |
|
[111] |
Bacillus safensis
|
n/s | Helianthus annuus | Cd, Fe, Zn |
|
[112] |
Bacillus sp., Klebsiella sp., |
P solubilization, |
Z. mays | Cd |
|
[113] |
Bacillus sp., Pseudomonas sp., |
IAA, HCN, siderophores, |
Eucalyptus camaldulensis | Cd |
|
[114] |
B. safensis, P. fluorescens | ACCD, IAA Siderophore | H. annuus | Zn, Pb |
|
[115] |
Brevibacterium casei | NH3, HCN, IAA, ACCD | Sinapis alba | Cd, Zn, Cu |
|
[116] |
Chaetomium cupreum | Siderophore | Miscanthus sinensis | Al, Cu, Fe, Pb, Zn |
|
[117] |
Chlorella vulgaris, Pseudomonas putida | n/s | O. sativa | As |
|
[118] |
Debaryomyces hansenii | IAA, |
O. sativa | As |
|
[119] |
Funneliformis mosseae | n/s | Glycine max | Cu, Pb, Zn |
|
[120] |
F. mosseae, Diversispora spurcum | n/s | Cynodon dactylon | Pb, Zn, Cd |
|
[121] |
Glomus aggregatum, G. intraradices, Glomus elunicatum, Glomus versiforme | n/s | M. sativa | Cd |
|
[122] |
G. versiforme | n/s | Solanum nigrum | Cd |
|
[123] |
Klebsiella oxytoca | P solubilization | H. annuus | Co, Pb, Zn |
|
[124] |
Klebsiella sp. | IAA, EPS, NH3 |
V. radiata | Cd, Cu, Pb |
|
[125] |
Kocuria flava, |
IAA, EPS siderophores | O. sativa | As |
|
[126] |
Oscillatoria sp. | n/s | Portulaca oleracea | Cr, Fe, Al, Zn |
|
[127] |
Oscillatoria sp., Leptolyngbya sp. | n/s | Lactuca sativa and Raphanus sativus | Fe, As, Pb, Cr, Ni |
|
[128] |
Paecilomyces formosus, Penicillium funiculosum | IAA, gibberellins, |
G. max | Al, Ni, and Cd |
|
[129] |
Pantoea agglomerans, Bacillus aryabhattai | ACCD, N fixation, |
Spartina densiflora | As, Cu, Pb, Zn, Cd |
|
[130] |
Pantoea stewartii, Microbacterium arborescens, Enterobacter sp. | IAA, ACCD, siderophores | Leptochloa fusca | Cr, Cu, Fe, Ni, Pb, Ba, Cd, Co |
|
[131] |
Penicillium janthinellum | IAA adsorption | C. dactylon | Cd |
|
[132] |
Piriformospora indica | n/s | Artemisia annua | As |
|
[133] |
P. indica | n/s | Cenchrus purpureus | Cd |
|
[134] |
Planomicrobium chinense, |
P solubilization | Z. mays | Ni, Cd, Pb, Co, Cu, Fe, Zn |
|
[135] |
P. aeruginosa | IAA, HCN, NH3, ACCD siderophore, |
T. aestivum | Cu, Cr, Cd |
|
[136] |
P. aeruginosa, Actinomyces sp., Azotobacter sp., Azospirillum brasilense., Bacillus subtilis | n/s | Eichhornia crassipes | As |
|
[137] |
P. fluorescens | IAA, ACCD, siderophore | Sedum alfredii | Cd |
|
[138] |
P. fluorescens | n/s | Pisum sativum | Pb |
|
[139] |
Pseudomonas libanensis, |
ACCD, IAA, |
H. annuus | Ni |
|
[140] |
Pseudomonas sp. | IAA, EPS, HCN P solubilization, N fixation, siderophores | M. sativa | Cr |
|
[141] |
Pseudomonas sp., |
Organic acids, ACCD, IAA, Acetoin, P solubilization, N fixation | Helianthus tuberosus | Cd and Zn |
|
[142] |
Pseudomonas sp., |
n/s | Centaurea cyanus | Pb |
|
[143] |
Pseudomonas sp., Azotobacter sp., Paenibacillus sp., Streptomyces sp. Glomus sp. | P solubilization |
Pennisetum glaucum
|
Fe |
|
[144] |
Rhizoglomus intraradices, Glomus etunicatum | n/s | T. aestivum | As |
|
[145] |
Rhizophagus fasciculatus, Rhizophagus intraradices, F. mosseae G. aggregatum | n/s | Z. mays | Cd, Cr, Ni, Pb, Fe, Zn, Cr, Mn |
|
[146] |
R. intraradices, G. versiforme | n/s | Z. mays | Cd |
|
[147] |
R. irregularis | n/s | M. sativa | Zn, Cd |
|
[63] |
Rhodobacter sphaeroides | IAA production | T. aestivum | Cd, Zn |
|
[148] |
Serratia sp. | IAA production, |
H. annuus | Cu, Zn, Ni, Pb, As |
|
[149] |
Simplicillium chinense | n/s | P. communis | Pb and Cd |
|
[150] |
S. meliloti, P. fluorescence, P. indica | IAA, HCN, ACCD |
M. sativa | Cd |
|
[151] |
Spirulina platensis | n/s | Z. mays | Cd |
|
[152] |
S. pactum | n/s | Lolium perenne | Pb |
|
[153] |
S. pactum, Bacillus sp. | n/s | B. juncea | Cd, Pb, Cu, Zn |
|
[154] |
Talaromyces pinophilus | Gibberellic acid | T. aestivum | Cd, Ni, Cu, Zn |
|
[155] |
Trametes hirsuta | n/s | T. aestivum | Pb |
|
[156] |
Trichoderma asperellum | n/s | Suaeda salsa | Pb |
|
[157] |
Variovorax paradoxus, Rhizobium leguminosarum |
n/s | P. sativum and B. juncea | Cd, Zn, Fe, Mn |
|
[158] |
n/s: not specified. ACCD: 1-Aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid deaminase, APX: ascorbate peroxidase, caros: carotenoids, CAT: catalase, Chl: chlorophylls, DM: dry matter, EPS: exopolysaccharides, FW: fresh weight, HCN: hydrogen cyanide, GA: Gibberellic acid, GPX: Glutathione peroxidase, GR: Glutathione reductase, gs: stomatal conductance, IAA: Indole-3-acetic acid, n/s: not specified, GSH: glutathione, PCs: phytochelatins, MDA: Malondialdehyde, PAL: Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase, POX or POD: peroxidase, PPO: polyphenol oxidase, RDM: root DM, RFW: root FW, ROS: Reactive oxygen species, RWC: relative water content, SDM: shoot DM, SFW: shoot FW, SOD: superoxide dismutase, AMF: arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi.
3.3. Metaorganism as a Strategy to Improve Phytoremediation
Recently, attention has been devoted to the plant and microbiome interactions as the “metaorganism approach” considering the close relationships between plants and microorganisms (symbiotic, non-symbiotic-rhizoephytic, and/or endophytic), which support tolerance to heavy metal stress and enhance the success of the phytoremediation process [159,160,161]. The metaorganism approach gathers the techniques related to (i) plant host selection, (ii) interference on root exudates, (iii) modification of the driving forces in the plant–microbiome interaction, and (iv) using meta-omics to obtain adequate information on the isolation and the application of microorganisms [160,161,162,163]. Plants are commonly pre-selected for traits, such as exceptional contaminant tolerance, high biomass, rapid growth, extensive root network, easy cultivation, repulsion to herbivores, and storage of HMs at high levels [20,35,56]. Plant selection is far more important than previously thought, owing to the association between plant phylogeny and microbial taxa, which can be altered under contamination. Bell et al. [164] demonstrated that total zinc accumulation in three willow cultivars was better explained by the fungal community structure, and concluded that the microbiome has the greatest impact on plant function and Zn extraction. In comparison to native plant species, non-native ones have been shown to form less beneficial associations with soil microbiome, which may reduce phytoremediation activity [165]. In this respect, other studies have established that the plant microbiome is important for plant growth, nutrition, and health, and directly and/or indirectly affects the composition, biomass, and functioning of plant communities, and should be considered in plant selection [166,167]. A better understanding of highly intimate plant–microbiome relationships could better predict potential positive or negative interactions. Rhizo-engineering is another technique that could ameliorate the phytoremediation process since root exudates play an important role in selecting and shaping rhizosphere microbiota, and there has been a major interest in changing the quality and quantity of root exudates via plant breeding and genetic modification to selectively stimulate specific microbial colonization [168]. Root exudates are composed of diverse compounds, which act as chemoattractant signals and/or carbon and nitrogen sources for microbes, thereby creating a unique environment in the rhizosphere. The rhizomicrobiome composition differs according to root exudate composition, as it changes along with the root system due to plant genotype and development stages and hence the phytoremediation process [140,160]. Identifying, understanding, and modifying the driving forces between the host and its microbiome are important to optimize the metaorganism. Studies suggest that a contaminated rhizosphere is more selective than a non-contaminated rhizosphere based on metatranscriptomic data [169,170,171,172]. Yergeau et al. [173] demonstrated that the combined selective pressure of contaminants and rhizosphere resulted in a higher expression of genes related to competition (antibiotic resistance and biofilm formation) in the contaminated rhizosphere, and thus genes related to phytoremediation were generally more expressed. Accordingly, arsC and ereA genes coding for resistance mechanisms to arsenic and macrolides, respectively, are the heaviest metal resistance genes (MRGs) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in a copper tailings dam area in northern China. The abundance of MRGs is positively correlated with Cd concentration, indicating the importance of Cd in the selection of MRGs [174]. In addition, phytoremediation systems can be optimized by focusing some energies at the metaorganisms omics level instead of solely focusing on plants and microbes [175]. Characterizing the plant–microbe metaorganism is considered the most powerful omics technology in phytoremediation since it leads to a new understanding of how integrated biological communities interact to adapt to contaminant stress and improve remediation [175]. Current novel omics approaches (especially next-generation sequencing technologies) combined with new bioinformatics techniques will provide intuitions on the microbe’s community and the ecology of the entire meta-communities, offering a wide range of opportunities for optimization and a better understanding of metaorganism-based approaches, that can be used to study the hyperaccumulator plant–microbial rhizobiome interactions, to maximize plant growth, for appropriate microbial community assembly, and ultimately, to enhance the phytoremediation process [175,176]. However, to advance further in the phytoremediation process, coordinated efforts from microbiologists, plant physiologists, molecular biologists, ecologists, soil scientists, environmental engineers, chemists, agronomists, and government regulators are needed [177,178,179,180].
3.4. Microbial Remediation: Heavy-Metal Remediation by Microorganisms
Microbial remediation is a strategy that exploits the properties of endogenous (native) or exogenous microorganisms’ application to transform environmental contaminants into harmless forms [20,70,181]. The soil microbial community is widespread and highly diverse, with unlimited, undiscovered, and unexplored potential for HMs’ remediation. The most frequent microorganisms used for HMs’ remediation in contaminated soils are bacteria and fungi, although yeast and microalgae are often beneficial [10,12,13,19]. The microbial remediation for soil polluted with HMs depends on the active metabolizing capacities of microorganisms since metals do not readily undergo either chemically or biologically induced degradation [70,181]. Notwithstanding, metal-tolerant microorganisms can depollute HMs via several techniques (Figure 4), including extracellular complexation, intracellular accumulation, redox reactions, volatilization, and precipitation [9,70]. Biosorption is the most important mechanism of microbial remediation. Extracellular materials cause the immobilization of HMs by binding to anionic functional groups on the cell surface [20,181,182]. Numerous microorganisms were reported owing to their capacities for HMs’ remediation, such as Nostoc linckia [13], B. megaterium, Rhizopus stolonifer [183], B. subtilis, Lecythophora sp. [19], and Saccharomyces cerevisiae [10]. Sporosarcina ginsengisoli was found to decrease the exchangeable arsenic fraction of soil by producing a significant amount of urease (a precipitating calcite enzyme) [184]. Imam et al. [185] demonstrated that B. subtilis absorbed 76% of Cd2+ and 30% of Hg2+ from contaminated soil, while S. cerevisiae was able to take 70% of Cd2+ and 20% of Hg2+. Co-application of microorganisms has proved to be successful in remediation programs rather than single inoculum since shortfalls in one of them may be compensated. Kang et al. [186] confirmed that the bacterial mixtures (Viridibacillus arenosi, Sporosarcina soli, and Enterobacter cloacae) exhibited greater resistance and a considerably higher HM bioremediation capacity than single-strain cultures. It is worth mentioning that microorganism selection should be carried out based on the mechanisms involved to restore soil health. To improve microbial remediation, diverse approaches could be employed depending on the type of metals and the contaminated environment.
3.4.1. Different Microbial Remediation Techniques Involving Removal and Containment of Contaminants
Bio-Stimulation
Bio-stimulation makes the soil auspicious for indigenous microorganisms by adding nutrients to the contaminated sites [70,187,188]. The addition of nutrients as manure, organic, and/or mineral amendments serves as a C source for the telluric microorganisms [187,188]. Consequently, growth, abundance, and microorganisms’ activities involved in the remediation, and thus bioremediation’s rate and efficiency, would be amplified [70,187,188]. Compost and biochar are currently the most common organic materials being exploited for their potential in the bio-stimulation processes. Raklami et al. [31] reported a significant decrease in the HMs’ fraction when the polluted soil was amended with 10% compost. Compost is a rich amendment with organic compounds (such as alcoholic, phenolic, and exopolysaccharides) that could retain HMs and convert them to their less-soluble form, and thus reduce their mobility [31,70,189]. Since the characteristics of organic amendment vary widely depending on the feedstock used for their production, their effects on the remediation and bio-stimulation processes could also differ. It is also important to note that the concentration of the amendment could have a considerable effect on the remediation process.
Bio-Augmentation
Bio-augmentation consists of the addition of pre-adapted, competent strains or consortia of microorganisms, the introduction of genetically modified microorganisms, or the addition of bioremediation-relevant gene packages in a vector to be transferred by conjugation into indigenous microorganisms [70,190]. The rationale for this approach is that the metabolic capacities of the indigenous microbial community may not be capable of remediating the HM-contaminated soils, or they may not tolerate the HM stress [188]. Another condition under which bio-augmentation may be considered is when the indigenous microbiota is low due to the recent exposure to HMs [70,190]. To succeed in this approach, the inoculum must be tolerant to HMs, maintain genetic constancy, endure in the receptive environment upon introduction, and successfully compete with the indigenous microbiota. Several studies have demonstrated that bio-augmentation significantly reduced HMs’ concentration in polluted soils [70,77,191]. Fauziah et al. [191] revealed that remediation via bio-augmentation with Bacillus sp., Lysinibacillus sp., or Rhodococcus sp. reduced the metal concentration of the HM-induced contaminated soils.
Engineered Microbial Remediation
Generally, autochthonous microbial strains are less tolerant/less potent to eliminate and remediate HM-polluted soils; therefore, bio-augmentation by genetically engineered microbial strains can be adopted [192,193]. Engineered microbial remediation is an emerging technology that has received more scientists’ attention as an efficient approach to restoring HM-contaminated soils [7,194]. These genetic adjustments encompass the insertion of the desired gene(s) in a single microorganism to improve metabolic pathways involved in remediation features. For example, the study of genes responsible for HMs’ accumulation can help to transfer this trait to other beneficial microbes [8,195]. Genetically engineered microbes have acted as robust bioremediation tools with significant capacities to remediate HM-contaminated soils. The commonly used genetically engineered microorganisms employed are: Ralstonia eutropha, B. subtilis, Escherichia coli, P. putida, and Sphingomonas desiccabilis [196,197,198]. Zhu et al. [197] reported that genetically engineered E. coli could be used to efficiently treat Cd and Pb environmental pollution. The E. coli cells were genetically engineered by introducing a de novo synthetic heavy-metal-capturing gene (encoding a protein SynHMB containing a six-histidine tag, two cysteine-rich peptides, and a metallothionein sequence) and a synthetic type VI secretory system (T6SS) cluster of P. putida, endowing the synthetic cells (SynEc2) with a high ability to display the heavy-metal-capturing SynHMB on the cell surface. Owing to the surface exposure of the six-histidine tag on the synthetic bacteria and carboxyl groups on the modified magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs), the co-assembled synthetic bacterial cells and MNPs captured these heavy metals with high removal efficiency (>90% even at 50 mg/L of Cd2+ and 50 mg/L of Pb2+) and were conveniently recycled by artificial magnetic fields. Wang et al. [199] demonstrated that the transcriptional activation mechanism of metalloprotein MerR in E. coli was more efficient than the most current biosystems with limited adsorption capacities. The engineered bioremediation system could continuously reduce mercury contamination in wide concentrations by transforming highly toxic Hg2+ to volatile and much less deleterious Hg0 with extraordinary selectivity.
3.4.2. Mechanism of Heavy Metal Remediation by Microorganisms
Microorganisms are essential in the remediation of HM-contaminated soils as they use many mechanisms to endure and cope with metal toxicity. Such mechanisms include extracellular/intracellular sequestration, production of metal chelators, precipitation, enzymatic detoxification, and volatilization [7,9] (Figure 4). Single or multiple detoxification mechanisms could be used by any microbes to remediate contaminated media.
Extracellular sequestration accumulates metal ions by cellular components in the periplasm or complexation of metal ions as insoluble compounds [200]. This strategy is considered a “pre-defense” strategy as it occurs outside the bacterial cell [201]. Microorganisms possess a negative charge in their cell wall because of anionic structures that facilitate microbes’ metal-binding through different interactions, including covalent bonding, ionic interactions, or van der Wall forces of attraction, and consequently, the remediation of contaminated media (Figure 4). These harmful sites are the hydroxyl, alcohol, phosphoryl, amine, carboxyl, ester, sulfhydryl, sulfonate, thioether, and thiol groups [200]. Microbial communities can also produce extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) such as polysaccharides, glycoproteins, lipopolysaccharides, and soluble peptides [9,202]. EPS are constituted by nucleic acids, lipids, proteins, and complex carbohydrates, and possess a substantial quantity of metal-binding sites (e.g., carboxyl, hydroxyl, amino, sulfhydryl, and phosphate) that enable the stabilization of HMs through biosorption [9,202,203]. For instance, Dobrowolski et al. [17] demonstrated that the EPS obtained from bacterial strains Rhodococcus opacus and Rhodococcus rhodochrous displayed very high adsorption affinity toward Cu2+ and Pb2+, Co2+, and Cr6+, and they could be a successful strategy to remove HMs. Additionally, some microorganisms have the ability to remediate HM-polluted soil through the production of various chelating agents, such as siderophores, glomalin, and biosurfactants, which play a crucial role in microorganisms’ tolerance against HM toxicity and thus could be utilized as an essential microbial remediation tool [9,35] (Figure 4). Siderophores such as hydroxamate are organic chelating ligands, excreted by bacteria and fungi, can bind the HMs (besides iron), including copper, zinc, and nickel, and can protect microorganisms from HM toxicity [204,205]. Similarly, glomalin, a glycoprotein copiously produced by almost all AMF, can bind HMs and form a complex that cannot be absorbed by the living cells, reducing the impact of toxic metals on other soil microorganisms [101,206]. González-Chávez et al. [206] demonstrated that the glomalin extracted from two HM-polluted soils contained 1.6–4.3 mg Cu, 0.02–0.08 mg Cd, and 0.62–1.12 mg Pb/g glomalin. The biosurfactants (multifunctional, amphiphilic, surface-active biomolecules) are distinguished products that have been successfully utilized in the remediation of toxic HMs [12,207] (Figure 4). Biosurfactants were widely used, as potential candidates, in the bioremediation process for their ionic nature, small size, low toxicity, multi-functionality, surface activity, and environmental compatibility [207,208,209]. Numerous microorganisms, such as P. aeruginosa [12], B. cereus [210], Bacillus sp. [209], Candida bombicola [211], Citrobacter freundii [212], and C. freundii [211], have been documented as potential biosurfactant producers (such as rhamnolipid, lipopeptide, and sophorolipid), demonstrating remarkable HMs’ removal (e.g., As, Cd, Zn, Pb, Cr, Hg, Mn, and Cu). Microbial remediation can also occur via the production of hydrogen sulfide [187,213,214] (Figure 4). It has been demonstrated that sulfate-reducing bacteria excrete a large amount of hydrogen sulfide in the extracellular environment and induce the precipitation of HMs, and thus the remediation of contaminated soils [215,216]. Desulfovibrio desulfuricans, a sulfate-reducing bacterium, can transform sulfate to hydrogen sulfate, which ultimately precipitates HMs (e.g., Cd and Zn) [215].
Similar to extracellular sequestration, intracellular sequestration is also another beneficial process referring to a slow metabolic-dependent removal mechanism, where the sequestration of HMs takes place inside the cell [9,217] (Figure 4). In the intracellular sequestration process, HMs are transported across the cell wall and enter the cell cytoplasm, where they are sequestered and prevented from reaching toxic levels [3,200,218]. HMs such as cadmium, zinc, copper, nickel, lead, and chromium are sequestered inside the microorganism cell [32,217,218]. These metals are typically shifted inside the cell by ion pumps, ion channels, endocytosis, and lipid permeation [3,219] (Figure 4). During intracellular sequestration, the concentration of the internalized heavy-metal ions is regulated by metal homeostasis, which involves an inactive complexation with high-affinity ligands to avoid the toxicity of HMs [219]. Inactive complexation, or bio-precipitation, may result from the excretion of special sulfide, cytosolic polyphosphates, and cysteine-rich proteins, such as metallothionein, glutathione, and phytochelatins, which form insoluble metal precipitates [24,220]. Some studies have demonstrated that the expression of metallothionein in bacterial cells induced a remarkable capacity for the removal and remediation of HMs [221,222]. Genetically engineered E. coli expressing four rice metallothioneins confers enhanced mercury tolerance, metal binding, and sequestration [221]. Previous studies have elucidated the critical role of glutathione, as an alternative chelator, in HMs’ intracellular sequestration [9,223]. As a result of the increasing exposition of As, the ectomycorrhizal fungus Hebeloma cylindrosporum accumulated As intracellularly and thus induced the glutathione biosynthesis pathway [224]. In the same way, Rehman and Anjum [223] have also emphasized the role of glutathione as a detoxifying agent in Candida tropicalis in response to Cd stress. In response to HM exposure, some microorganisms produce phytochelatins to cope with their toxicity. Phytochelatins are metal-binding, cysteine-rich peptides consisting of three amino acids: glutamate, cysteine, and glycine, and the sulfhydryl group in the cysteine molecule is responsible for metal sequestration [24,220]. In an attempt to increase microbial remediation, the phytochelatins synthase gene (SpPCS) from Schizosaccharomyces pombe was cloned and expressed in P. putida KT2440. The recombined strain KT2440-SpPCS exhibited enhanced Cd, Ag, and Hg resistance and Cd accumulation [225].
Microbial communities have demonstrated their transforming capabilities by changing HMs to a less-toxic form, which has played an essential role in the microbial remediation of HMs in polluted soils [22,226] (Figure 4). Microbial transformations of HMs include oxidation, reduction, alkylation, and methylation. Numerous HMs exist in more than one chemical oxidation form [70,182]. Theoretically, the toxicity and bioavailability of As largely depend on the chemical form, and As3+ is considerably more mobile and toxic than As5+ (As3+ is 100× more toxic than As5+) [182,227]. As3+ oxidation capacity has been seen in many bacterial strains, including P. aeruginosa, P. resinovorans, Kocuria palustris, P. alcaligenes, Vogesella indigofera, Micrococcus sp., and Acinetobacter sp. [182,228], which is essential from the point of view of metal immobilization and bioremediation of contaminated areas. In addition, microorganisms can remediate several HMs by reducing them to a lower redox form [182,200] (Figure 4). This process is reversed as compared to the oxidation process. HMs which have many oxidation states remained insoluble in their reduced state. The microbial enzymatic reduction proved helpful in removing and remediating such elements from the solution [229,230]. Many beneficial microorganisms have been characterized by anaerobic or aerobic reduction of chromium and mercury as an effective means of Cr and Hg detoxification. Ochrobactrum intermedium, an indigenous chromium-reducing bacterial strain isolated from a tannery waste, can be an effective means of chromium detoxification (leads to the reduction of highly toxic chromium (VI) to less-toxic chromium (III)) under a wide range of environmental conditions [231]. Shewanella oneidensis, Geobacter sulfurreducens, and Geobacter metallireducens can reduce ionic mercury to elemental mercury and decrease its toxicity [232]. In addition to oxidation and reduction reactions, microorganisms can bioremediate contaminated soils by converting HMs (e.g., Pb, Hg, Se, As, Tn, and Sn) to methyl derivatives that are subsequently removed by volatilization [55,182]. It has been demonstrated that numerous microorganisms can transfer a methyl group to the metals, which results in methylated derivatives that differ in volatility, solubility, and toxicity [233,234,235]. For instance, Hu et al. [236] have demonstrated that D. desulphuricans ND132 methylates elemental mercury. Likewise, Penicillium sp. and Aspergillus sp. could volatilize arsenic mainly as trimethyl arsine, followed by mono- and di-methyl arsine [237].
Table 3 presents a list of microorganisms, their role in bioremediation, and their removal efficiency.
Table 3List of some microorganisms used for microbial remediation.
Group | Bioremediation | Metal | Metal Concentration (mg/L) | Remediation Efficiency (%) | Mechanism | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bacteria | P. aeruginosa | As, Cd, Zn | 182, 20, 983 | 53, 90, 80 | Biosurfactant production | [12] |
R. opacus | Pb, Cd, Ni, Co, Cr | 100, 100, 250, 200, 100 | n/s | Adsorption in exopolysaccharides | [17] | |
R. rhodochrous | Pb, Cd, Ni, Co, Cr | 100, 250, 250, 150, 150 | n/s | Adsorption in exopolysaccharides | [17] | |
B. cereeus | Cr, Fe, Mn, Ni, Cu, Cd, Zn | 100, 100, 50, 50, 30, 30, 50 | 82, 92, 97, 43, 25, 31, 36 | Reduction (for Cr) | [18] | |
S. ginsengisoli | As | 500 | 98 | Precipitation | [184] | |
B. subtilis | Hg, Cd | 500 | 30, 76 | Biosrption | [185] | |
B. cereus | Pb, Cd, Cr | 100 | 69, 54, 43 | Biosurfactant production | [210] | |
Bacillus sp. | Pb, Hg, Mn, Cd | 1000 | 76, 98, 90, 100 | Biosurfactant production | [209] | |
C. freundii | Al, Cd, Cu, Fe, Pb, Mn, Zn | n/s | 87, 40, 19, 34, 57, 25, 49 | Biosurfactant production | [212] | |
D. desulfuricans | Cd, Ni, Cr | 100 | 100, 98, 74 | Sulfate-reduction | [215] | |
Ensifer adhaerens | Cr, Cu, Cd, Ni, Zn, Pb | 150 | 80, 81, 80, 82, 80, 80 | Bioaccumulation and biosorption | [218] | |
Acinetobacter sp. | Cr | 16 | 87 | Reduction | [238] | |
Alcaligenes faecalis | Cd | 100 | 70 | Adsorption and/or precipitation | [239] | |
Bacillus pumilus | Pb | 100 | 88 | Adsorption and/or precipitation | [239] | |
Brevibacterium iodinium | Pb | 100 | 87 | Adsorption and/or precipitation | [239] | |
P. aeruginosa | Cd, Pb | 100 | 76 | Adsorption and/or precipitation | [239] | |
B. cereus | Pb | 100 | 79.26 | Bioaccumulation and biosorption | [240] | |
Bacillus circulans | Cr | 1110 | 71 | Reduction | [241] | |
Bacillus firmus | Pb, Cu, Zn | 1000 | 98, 75, 62 | Adsorption in exopolysaccharides | [242] | |
B. licheniformis | Hg | 100 | 73 | - | [243] | |
B. subtilis | Cr | 570 | 100 | Reduction | [244] | |
P. aeruginosa | Cr | 570 | 100 | Reduction | [244] | |
Bacillus xiamenensis | Pb | 100 | 99.19 | Bioaccumulation and biosorption | [245] | |
Cellulosimicrobium sp. | Cr | 300 | 63 | Reduction | [246] | |
D. desulfuricans | Cr, Cu, Ni | 200 | 56, 79, 90 | - | [247] | |
Micrococcus sp. | Cr, Ni | 100, 50 | 90, 55 | Biosrption | [248] | |
P. aeruginosa | Cd, Pb | 435, 905 | 92, 88 | Biosurfactant production | [249] | |
Sporosarcina saromensis | Cr | 100 | 100 | Reduction | [250] | |
Streptomyces sp. | Zn | 65.38, 32.69 | 36 or 43 | Bioaccumulation or biosorption | [251] | |
Yeast | S. cerevisiae | Pb, Cd | 25, 80 | 71, 77 | Biosorption | [10] |
S. cerevisiae | Hg, Cd | 500 | 19, 70 | Biosorption | [185] | |
C. bombicola | Cr, Pb, Zn, Cu, Cd | 70 | 23, 10, 7, 5, 16 | Biosurfactant production | [211] | |
C. tropicalis | Cd | 100 | 78 | Biosorption | [223] | |
Candida parapsilosis | Hg | 100 | 80 | - | [243] | |
S. cerevisiae | Cr | 570 | 96 | Reduction | [244] | |
Candida sphaerica | Fe, Zn, Pb | 1877, 1470, 3038 | 89, 87, 70 | Biosurfactant production | [252] | |
Cryptococcus sp. | Zn | 100 | 85 | Biosurfactant production | [253] | |
Rhodotorula mucilaginosa | Cr | 200 | 27 | Reduction | [254] | |
Fungi | A. niger | Cd, Cr | 0.6, 0.4 | 79, 48 | Bioaccumulation | [11] |
Aspergillus fumigatus | Cd, Cr | 0.6, 0.4 | 76, 35 | Bioaccumulation | [11] | |
Penicillium rubens | Cd, Cr | 0.6, 0.4 | 75, 35 | Bioaccumulation | [11] | |
Lecythophora sp. | As | 10 | 32 | Reduction and volatilization | [19] | |
S. chinense | Cd, Pb | 400, 2000 | 88, 58 | Biosorption | [150] | |
Aspergillus sp. | Cr, Ni | 100, 50 | 92, 9 | Biosorption | [248] | |
Aspergillus flavus | Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb, Zn | 1000 | 87, 83, 96, 92, 87, 70 | Biosorption | [255] | |
Aspergillus gracilis | Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb, Zn | 1000 | 66, 57, 90, 77, 82, 7 | Biosorption | [255] | |
Aspergillus penicillioides | Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb, Zn | 1000 | 53, 32, 90, 69, 77, 84 | Biosorption | [255] | |
Aspergillus restrictus | Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb, Zn | 1000 | 61,77, 64, 72, 44, 87 | Biosorption | [255] | |
Sterigmatomyces halophilus | Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb, Zn | 1000 | 95, 90, 77, 89, 57, 93 | Biosorption | [255] | |
A. niger | Ni | 30 | 70.3 | Biosorption | [256] | |
Aspergillus versicolor | Cr, Ni, Cu | 50 | 100, 30, 29 | Bioaccumulation | [257] | |
Phanerochaete chrysosporium | Cd, Ni | 25, 16 | 96, 89 | Bioaccumulation | [258] | |
Cyanobacteria | N. linckia | Cr, Fe, Ni, Zn, Cu | 2.5, 2, 0.5, 0.5, 0.5 | n/s | Bioaccumulation | [13] |
Chlorella pyrenoidosa | Cu | 5 | 83 | Biosorption | [53] | |
Anabaena variabilis | Pb | 15 | 71.4 | Biosorption and/or bioaccumulation | [259] | |
Nostoc muscorum | Pb | 15 | 97.8 | Biosorption and/or bioaccumulation | [259] | |
Botryocossuss sp. | Cr | 5 | 94 | Reduction and biosorption | [260] | |
C. pyrenoidosa | Cd | 1.5 | 45.45 | Biosorption and bioaccumulation | [261] | |
Scenedesmus acutus | Cd | 1.5 | 57.14 | Biosorption and bioaccumulation | [261] | |
Scenedesmus sp. | Cr | 10 | 93 | Biosorption | [262] | |
Spirogyra sp. | Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Se, Zn | 5 | 98, 90, 100, 100, 98, 81 | Biosorption and/or bioaccumulation | [263] | |
S. platensis | Cr, Fe, Ni, Zn | 10, 5, 2, 2 | n/s | Bioaccumulation | [264] | |
Spirulina sp. | Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Se, Zn | 5 | 98, 81, 99, 100, 99, 79 | Biosorption and/or bioaccumulation | [263] |
n/s: Not specified.
3.4.3. Soil Microbiota Evolution under HMs Contamination and Phytoremediation Approach
HMs have been known to disrupt ecosystem structure and functioning by disordering soil quality, substantial changes in microbial diversity, and biogeochemical cycles [265,266]. Invariably, all metals (single or in combination) created at least some change in the microbial community [169]. Microbial soil diversity is extremely rich, but in moderate HM exposure, the microbial diversity is reduced by more than 1000×, while during chronic contamination, it may account for only 1% of the initial community [5,170,171]. Several studies have demonstrated that reduced diversity is a commonly observed effect since HMs target specific pathways, resulting in disruption of definitive metabolic functions and selective inhibition, causing a decline in both numbers and diversity of the microbial community relying on those pathways and the proliferation of a few specific resistant groups [172]. For instance, Fajardo et al. [266] demonstrated that after 55 days, HM (Pb, Cd, and Zn) exposure had a strong effect on metabolic pathways, specifically, genetic information processing (transcription factors), metabolism (glycan biosynthesis and energy metabolism), and environmental processing (transporters and ABC transporters). Ecotoxicological tests showed that HMs induced a selective pressure on the soil microbiome, and the bacterial composition of the samples varied as the exposure time increased [266]. Firmicutes are the most resistant phylum, while the abundance of other bacterial phyla, such as Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, Verrucomicrobia, and Bacteroidetes, decreased over time in the HM-spiked soil samples [266]. On the contrary, Li et al. [267] revealed that Proteobacteria, Chloroflexi, and Acidobacteria were the abundant phyla in the highly contaminated soils, and the abundance of Proteobacteria increased with the increase of HMs’ content, especially Cd, Ti, V, Cr, Co, Zn, As, Rb, Sr, Zr, Pb, and Bi. Similarly, Qiao et al. [268] found that in the farmland surrounding gold tailings (contaminated by HMs, mainly As, Pb, and Cd), Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria were the most abundant phyla in the bacterial community, followed by Acidobacteria, Chloroflexi, and Gemmatimonadetes. Actinobacteria content was reduced by increasing the level of the contamination, while the abundance of Proteobacteria was amplified. In this line, several other reports demonstrated that Proteobacteria tend to be the dominant bacteria in soil with long-term HM contamination as they exhibit better tolerance to HM pollution [269,270,271,272,273]. In other cases, microbial diversity may not be affected and remain constant, even under high exposure levels [274,275]. These results could be related to the strong resistance and resilience of the initial community and/or the capacity to acquire new resistant genes.
The remediation approaches also contribute to the substantial change in the microbial community. Huang et al. [276] demonstrated that the total concentration of HMs in two contaminated areas was diluted, and soil physicochemical characteristics were changed during the remediation approach of soil mixing. This change in soil has led to significant alterations of microbial diversity of the remediated areas. Proteobacteria and Acidobacteria were the phyla displaying a significant increase, while Chloroflexi was the only phylum that appeared to significantly reduce. Similarly, Wu et al. [277] revealed that the abundance of Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria was remarkably higher in revegetated tailings with Lespedeza bicolor, while Chloroflexi showed the opposite. After 13 years of phytoremediating an abandoned mine land in eastern China with white clover, ryegrass, and alfalfa, the soil microbial diversity was higher than the control [278]. Several additional studies highlighted the positive effect of the revegetation process and the phytoremediation approach in restoring the microbial diversity and activity in contaminated areas with HMs [279,280,281,282,283]. This positive effect could be related to roots exudates favoring microbial communities’ development.
3.4.4. Microbial Remediation: Pitfalls, Drawbacks, and Future Application
Nowadays, microbial remediation has attracted scientists’ attention owing to its outstanding advantages, in contrast to the ‘traditional’ methods, as it exploits the natural ability of microorganisms to convert HMs into usually harmless forms [9,284]. Microbial remediation is simple, eco-friendly, sustainable, and relatively easy to implement in the waste treatment process for contaminated environments [285]. Additionally, this process can be carried out in situ, does not require excavation of the contaminated soil, often no residual treatment is required, and it proves to be cost-effective (vs. conventional clean-up treatments) [69,284,286]. The site disruption is minimal, and instantaneous management of soil and groundwater is possible [8,286]. Consequently, this strategy permits the chemical stabilization of HMs, reduces their water leaching and transport, and has fewer secondary effects on the surrounding environment, mainly when bio-stimulation, rather than bio-augmentation, is used [8,188]. Another advantage is that native microorganisms can be used in the clean-up process, for which no effort or manipulation in the environment for microbial growth is needed [20]. Microbial remediation is a natural process and is perceived positively by the public as a waste clean-up technique for contaminated soils [69].
However, there are still bottlenecks in its wide application. The process is slower and more time-consuming than other remedial methods [9]. The effectiveness of microbial remediation varies depending on the type of microorganism, its resistance, nature, level, and the synergetic toxicity of HMs (the process is precise) [9,181]. For instance, the effectiveness of this strategy depends on several factors, including the presence of microbial populations, suitable growth conditions, and appropriate levels of nutrients and pollutants [285]. Bioremediation is relatively sensitive to environmental factors (pH, humidity, temperature, presence of other ions and humic colloidal substances), and other living organisms and their competitors could play an essential role in the colonization of microorganisms of interest and the biofilm formation [9,181,285]. When these conditions are not satisfactory, the ability of the microbial population could be reduced [188,285]. A significant limitation of microbial remediation is that the HMs are concentrated or converted to less-toxic forms, but their presence is still in the soil [8]. Besides, the volatilization of some HMs causes atmospheric pollution, and hence controlling this process may be complex [287]. Indeed, hydrological and geochemical conditions may change over time, which could cause the remobilization of contaminants previously stabilized, and the risk of contaminants leaching into groundwater has to be tackled [288]. Another disadvantage faced by microbial remediation is monitoring ambiguity regarding the acceptable performance criteria of the level/definition of a ‘clean’ site, making the performance endpoint regulations uncertain and thus the evaluation of microbial remediation complex [286]. So far, four significant restrictions of using microbial remediation have been visualized, which hampers the spread of microbial strategies: (i) complications in extrapolating the technique from laboratory experiments and pilot-scale studies to full-scale field operations, (ii) insufficient understanding of the biological processes, the reaction involved to predict the output, and how it would react in the field, (iii) its management and anomalies in stimulating the microbe, and (iv) the struggle in ensuring proper contact or engagement between the microbe and HMs [182,286].
Research is required to advance and engineer microbial remediation strategies appropriate for sites with complex environmental stresses. The molecular mechanisms of heavy-metal detoxification need to be further expounded to enhance microorganisms’ accumulation of HMs. With an advanced understanding of the microbial remediation process and the mechanisms involved at the ecological and genetic levels, novel microbial remediation methods for bioremediation of HM-contaminated soils could be available.
3.5. Conclusions and Future Perspectives
Environmental pollution is a vital issue and is considered one of the biggest challenges of this century. Finding effective solutions to preserve the environment for the future generation is a time-demanding task. Environmental pollution, especially HM pollution, results in drastic effects on soil quality, fertility, loss of microbial biodiversity, and destruction of the vegetal cover. Scientists have developed several physicochemical strategies to remediate soils contaminated with HMs. Although these strategies are equitably widespread and suitable for removing HMs, they are challenging to apply, very expensive, non-specific, inefficient in a specific situation, and can significantly alter soil quality. As alternatives, new biological-based methods for the remediation of contaminated soils have been established. Biotechnological strategies, which exploit plants and microorganisms’ tolerance and properties (bacteria, microalgae, yeast, and fungi) to detoxify and stabilize HMs, have arisen as emerging and innovative technologies, and demonstrate increasing opportunities to restore HM-contaminated soils. Microbial remediation and phytoremediation are reliable, cost-effective, efficient, eco-feasible alternatives. Microorganisms and plants possess inherent mechanisms to tolerate toxic elements and remove metals from the environment. The microbes use various mechanisms, including extracellular/intracellular sequestration, metal chelators’ production, precipitation, enzymatic detoxification, and volatilization. The microbial remediation strategy could be coupled with phytoremediation methods (phytostabilization, phytoextraction, and phytovolatilization) for an effective reclamation. Engineered microbes and plants could add a layer to the bioremediation effectiveness that could surpass the limitations that each strategy suffers from.
A single strategy is neither effective nor sufficient for operational reclamation of HM-contaminated soils. The combination of different approaches—physical, chemical, and biological—is essential for highly effective and exhaustive phytoremediation in the future, and should be promoted. Research must focus on evaluating the effect of combining different microbes on phytoremediation efficiency, such as coupled microbial remediation with organic and inorganic chelating amendments. Besides, metagenomics approaches and microbial metabolic analysis need to be explored to select promising metal resistance and detoxification genes that could be de-regulated in other species to improve their specific performance. Metagenomics approaches should also focus on the evolution of microbial communities during the bioremediation process and determine the best strategies to enhance their survival because of the possible competitiveness with indigenous microbial populations and because survivability when released into the environment during the field trials is currently insufficient. Moreover, more genomic research is required to fully understand the metabolic pathways and the mechanisms involved in microbes and plants’ tolerance and detoxification of HMs.
M.B.: conceptualization, research design, collecting opinions from all authors; A.R.: drafting the first version of the manuscript with editorial input from M.B.; M.B. and A.R.: designing the figures; A.M. and K.O. contributed to the conception of the work; M.B. revised and finalized the review. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Not applicable.
Not applicable.
Not applicable.
We apologize to all colleagues whose work was not referenced due to space constraints.
The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this review.
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Figure 1. Main phytoremediation techniques for the remediation of contaminated environments. HM: Heavy metal.
Figure 2. Schematic representation of various mechanisms involved in plant metal detoxification. ZIP, LCT1, and CTR1: metal transporters at the plasma membrane; HMA2/4: metal transporters; TgMTP and HMT: metal transporters at the tonoplast; Me2+: bivalent metals; ROS: reactive oxygen species; H2O2: hydrogen peroxide; SOD: superoxide dismutase; CAT: catalase; APX: ascorbate peroxidase; ASA: ascorbic acid; GLU: glutathione; T-SH: protein thiols; PCS: phytochelatin synthase; GS: glutathione synthetase; GCS: γ-glutamylcysteine synthetase; APS: adenosine 5’-phosphosulfate; Cys: cysteine; Glu: glutamate; GSH: glutathione; MT: metallothionein; LMW: low molecular weight; HMW: high molecular weight.
Figure 3. Microbial-assisted phytoremediation for heavy metal decontamination of polluted soils.
Figure 4. Schematic representation of various mechanisms involved in microbial remediation of HM-contaminated soil. HMs: Heavy metals; SD: Siderophores; EPS: Extracellular polymeric substances; BS: Biosurfactants.
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Abstract
Rapid industrialization, mine tailings runoff, and agricultural activities are often detrimental to soil health and can distribute hazardous metal(loid)s into the soil environment, with harmful effects on human and ecosystem health. Plants and their associated microbes can be deployed to clean up and prevent environmental pollution. This green technology has emerged as one of the most attractive and acceptable practices for using natural processes to break down organic contaminants or accumulate and stabilize metal pollutants by acting as filters or traps. This review explores the interactions between plants, their associated microbiomes, and the environment, and discusses how they shape the assembly of plant-associated microbial communities and modulate metal(loid)s remediation. Here, we also overview microbe–heavy-metal(loid)s interactions and discuss microbial bioremediation and plants with advanced phytoremediation properties approaches that have been successfully used, as well as their associated biological processes. We conclude by providing insights into the underlying remediation strategies’ mechanisms, key challenges, and future directions for the remediation of metal(loid)s-polluted agricultural soils with environmentally friendly techniques.
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1 Laboratory of Microbial Biotechnologies, Agrosciences, and Environment, Labeled Research Unit-CNRST N°4, Faculty of Sciences Semlalia, Cadi Ayyad University, Marrakesh 40000, Morocco;
2 Center of Agrobiotechnology and Bioengineering, Research Unit Labelled CNRST (Centre Agro-Biotech URL-CNRST-05), “Physiology of Abiotic Stresses” Team, Cadi Ayyad University, Marrakesh 40000, Morocco;
3 Laboratory of Biochemistry, Faculty of Agriculture, Niigata University, Niigata 950-2181, Japan