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Polyploidy affects responses to Nickel in Ni-hyperaccumulating plants: Evidence from the model species Odontarrhena bertolonii (Brassicaceae)

Environmental and Experimental Botany 2023 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ilaria Colzi, Cristina Gonnelli, Isabella Bettarini, Federico Selvi

Summary

This paper is not about microplastics; it studies whether polyploid plants (those with extra chromosome sets) accumulate more nickel than diploid plants when grown in metal-contaminated soils, with applications in phytoremediation.

Compared with their diploid progenitors, polyploid plants often display enhanced vigor and adaptive ability to extreme conditions. Previous studies investigated polyploid fitness under various forms of environmental stress, but whether the whole-genome duplication can affect growth, accumulation ability and tolerance levels to trace metals in metal-accumulating species remains obscure. We investigated this topic using an experimental approach and Odontarrhena bertolonii as model system. This obligate serpentine endemic includes diploid and tetraploid accessions with allopatric distribution in Tuscany and Liguria. Three diploid (2 n = 2x = 16) and three natural autotetraploid (2 n = 4x = 32) accessions were compared for growth, leaf traits, photosynthetic parameters and metal accumulation after cultivation on natural serpentine soil and in Ni-containing hydroponic solutions. In soil cultivation, shoot Ni concentration was similar in diploid and tetraploid plants, but the metal content per plant was significantly higher in polyploids because of their higher biomass production. The latter was mainly due to the production of larger leaves, coupled to a lower specific leaf area, which pointed to a better adaptation of the tetraploids to serpentine soil. In hydroponics, all the accessions showed an hormetic-like Ni effect, with stimulation of growth and photosynthesis in the low-dose zone. The data fitting to the hormetic model displayed significant differences in some parameters, with the tetraploid plants showing higher maximal length of roots and shoots and higher requirement of both external and internal Ni concentrations for optimal growth, in respect to diploid plants. On the other hand, Ni tolerance to both external and internal metal concentrations was similar in the plants of the two ploidy levels. Our results suggest that whole-genome duplication can affect the potential for growth and Ni-hyperaccumulation in obligate Ni-accumulator plants like O. bertolonii. This points to the opportunity of selecting polyploid instead of diploid accessions for environmental restoration and metal cropping practices, when the candidate species includes both chromosome races.

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