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  4. Assessment of successful experiments and limitations of phytotechnologies: contaminant uptake, detoxification and sequestration, and consequences for food safety
 
review article

Assessment of successful experiments and limitations of phytotechnologies: contaminant uptake, detoxification and sequestration, and consequences for food safety

Mench, Michel
•
Schwitzguebel, Jean-Paul  
•
Schroeder, Peter
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2009
Environmental Science and Pollution Research

The term "phytotechnologies" refers to the application of science and engineering to provide solutions involving plants, including phytoremediation options using plants and associated microbes to remediate environmental compartments contaminated by trace elements (TE) and organic xenobiotics (OX). An extended knowledge of the uptake, translocation, storage, and detoxification mechanisms in plants, of the interactions with microorganisms, and of the use of "omic" technologies (functional genomics, proteomics, and metabolomics), combined with genetic analysis and plant improvement, is essential to understand the fate of contaminants in plants and food, nonfood and technical crops. The integration of physicochemical and biological understanding allows the optimization of these properties of plants, making phytotechnologies more economically and socially attractive, decreasing the level and transfer of contaminants along the food chain and augmenting the content of essential minerals in food crops. This review will disseminate experience gained between 2004 and 2009 by three working groups of COST Action 859 on the uptake, detoxification, and sequestration of pollutants by plants and consequences for food safety. Gaps between scientific approaches and lack of understanding are examined to suggest further research and to clarify the current state-of-the-art for potential end-users of such green options.

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Type
review article
DOI
10.1007/s11356-009-0252-z
Web of Science ID

WOS:000271398300011

Author(s)
Mench, Michel
Schwitzguebel, Jean-Paul  
Schroeder, Peter
Bert, Valerie
Gawronski, Stanislaw
Gupta, Satish
Date Issued

2009

Published in
Environmental Science and Pollution Research
Volume

16

Start page

876

End page

900

Subjects

Contaminated soil

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Contaminated water

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Food safety

•

Genes

•

Microorganisms

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Organic xenobiotics

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Phytoremediation

•

Plant species

•

Root uptake

•

Tolerance

•

Trace elements

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Hyperaccumulator Thlaspi-Caerulescens

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Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi

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Growth-Promoting Bacteria

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Heavy-Metal Accumulation

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Canola Brassica-Napus

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Arabidopsis-Thaliana

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Organic Pollutants

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Plant-Growth

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Cadmium Tolerance

•

Assisted Phytoextraction

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBE  
Available on Infoscience
November 30, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/59694
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