Adaptive responses of Brassica juncea vs. Sorghum bicolor to increasing toxicity of potentially toxic elements in soil.
Fernández-Guerrero A, Bernal MP, Álvarez-Robles MJ, González-Barrio R, Clemente R
Phytoremediation
Old mine tailings and industrial brownfields leaching cadmium and zinc into neighborhood soils could be cleaned up by strategically planting mustard—a fast-growing crop that pulls those metals right out of the ground and into its leaves.
Scientists grew mustard plants and sorghum in soil mixed with dirt taken from a contaminated mine, creating different levels of pollution. They tracked how well each plant survived, how much metal each absorbed into its body, and how the plants chemically fought back against the stress of living in poisoned soil. Mustard was the better metal-absorber, making it more useful for pulling toxins out of the ground, while sorghum was tougher overall but kept more metals out of its tissues.
Key Findings
Soil cadmium levels reached up to 3.3 mg/kg and zinc up to 1400 mg/kg DTPA-extractable concentrations across the pollution gradient
Brassica juncea (mustard) showed higher bioaccumulation of cadmium and zinc, confirming its stronger phytoremediation potential compared to sorghum
Both species activated biochemical stress defenses—including proline and phenolic compounds—but their strategies differed, with sorghum exhibiting greater tolerance through exclusion rather than accumulation
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers tested how mustard and sorghum plants cope with increasingly contaminated soil from a mining site, measuring plant health, metal uptake, and stress responses. Mustard proved better at absorbing heavy metals like cadmium and zinc, while sorghum showed stronger defenses against oxidative damage.
Abstract Preview
Understanding species-specific responses to potentially toxic elements (PTEs) is essential for phytoremediation and ecological risk assessment. This study evaluated the tolerance and stress respons...
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Brassica juncea, commonly mustard greens, brown mustard, Chinese mustard, Indian mustard, Japanese mustard, Korean green mustard, leaf mustard, Oriental mustard and vegetable mustard, is a species of mustard plant.