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Cadmium-induced hormesis effect in medicinal herbs improves the efficiency of safe utilization for low cadmium-contaminated farmland soil

Mengdi Xie, Wenqing Chen, Dai Haibo, Xiaoqing Wang, Yang Li, Kang Yuchen, Sun Hui, Lei Wang

2021Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Compared to other soil remediation technologies, Cd-contaminated farmland soil with low cadmium accumulation (LCA) plant-based safe utilization is more catered to developing countries with food in high demand. Hormesis, which describes the fortification of plant growth performance by a low level of environmental stress, can be innovatively used to achieve increases in crop yield and plant functional components, thus amplifying the safe utilization efficiency of low Cd-contaminated soil by LCA plants. In the present study, the growth and physiological responses of Polygonatum sibiricum, a traditional Chinese medicinal herb, were investigated under laboratory conditions of gradient Cd dosage concentrations and times. As a result, the growth performance of P. sibiricum reached the peak of an inverse U-shaped curve of hormesis under e0 mg kg−1 and 9 months of Cd stress, with elevations in tuber biomass (medicinal part), plant height and polysaccharide content (medicinal components) of 143%, 25% and 90%, respectively. Meanwhile, trace Cd accumulation (0.41 mg kg−1) in the tuber guaranteed medicinal edible safety. In addition, Cd-induced hormesis in P. sibiricum was verified to be overcompensated by antioxidation systems. In conclusion, such ‘win-win’ results, including low Cd accumulation and enhancement of plant pharmaceutical value, provided medicinal herbs with a possibility for safe soil utilization.

Topics & Concepts

CadmiumHormesisContaminationSoil contaminationCADMIUM EXPOSUREEnvironmental chemistryToxicologyHeavy metalsEnvironmental scienceChemistryBiologyEcologyBiochemistryOxidative stressOrganic chemistryHeavy Metals in PlantsHeavy metals in environmentGABA and Rice Research