Litcius/Paper detail

Metabolome and transcriptome analyses of plants grown in naturally attenuated soil after hydrogen fluoride exposure

Jungman Jo, Jinkyung Lee, Jinkyung Lee, Yongtae Ahn, Yu Sik Hwang, Junboum Park, Jeongae Lee, Jeongae Lee, Jaeyoung Choi

2022Journal of Hazardous Materials21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Accidental chemical leaks and illegal chemical discharges are a global environmental issue. In 2012, a hydrogen fluoride leak in Gumi, South Korea, killed several people and contaminated the environment. This leak also led to a significant decline in crop yield, even after the soil concentration of hydrogen fluoride decreased to below the standard level following natural attenuation. To determine the cause of this decreased plant productivity, we designed direct and indirect exposure tests by evaluating the metabolome, transcriptome, and phenome of the plants. In an indirect exposure test, soil metabolomics revealed downregulation of metabolites in vitamin B6, lipopolysaccharide, osmolyte, and exopolysaccharide metabolism. Next-generation sequencing of the plants showed that ABR1 and DREB1A were overexpressed in response to stress. Plant metabolomics demonstrated upregulation of folate biosynthesis and nicotinate and nicotinamide metabolism associated with detoxification of reactive oxygen species. These results demonstrate impaired metabolism of soil microbes and plants even after natural attenuation of hydrogen fluoride in soil. The novel chemical exposure testing used in this study can be applied to identify hidden damage to organisms after natural attenuation of chemicals in soil, as well as biomarkers for explaining the decline in yield of plants grown in soil near pollutant-emitting industrial facilities.

Topics & Concepts

MetabolomeMetabolomicsChemistryEnvironmental chemistryTranscriptomeBiologyBiochemistryChromatographyGeneGene expressionFluoride Effects and RemovalMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyMetabolomics and Mass Spectrometry Studies