Typha latifolia as potential phytoremediator of 2,4-dichlorophenol: Analysis of tolerance, uptake and possible transformation processes
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2,4-Dichlorophenol (2,4-DCP) is considered a priority pollutant due to its high toxicity. Therefore, it is urgent to develop technologies for the disposal of this pollutant. Various remediation processes have been proposed for the elimination of 2,4-DCP in contaminated water, however, most of them involve high costs of operation and maintenance. This study aimed to determine the capacity of remediation of 2,4-DCP in water by Typha latifolia L. wild plants. For that, the tolerance, removal, accumulation and biotransformation of 2,4-DCP by T. latifolia were investigated. The plants were exposed to 2,4-DCP solutions with a concentration range from 1.5 to 300 mgL−1for 10 days. They exhibited a reduction in chlorophyll levels and growth rate when 2,4-DCP solutions were ≥30 mgL−1and ≥50 mgL−1, respectively. The removal of contaminant was dose-depended, being 99.7%25 at 1.5–3 mgL−1, 59–70%25 at 10–70 mgL−1and 35–42%25 at 100–300 mgL−1of 2,4-DCP in the solution. Studies indicated that 2,4-DCP was mainly accumulated in root tissue rather than in shoot tissue. Acid hydrolysis of biomass extracts suggests 2,4-DCP bioconjugates formation in root tissue as a response mechanism. Additionally, an increment in glutathione S-transferase (GST) activity could indicate a 2,4-DCP conjugation with glutathione as a detoxification mechanism of T. latifolia. © 2017 Elsevier Ltd
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2,4-Dichlorophenol; Phenolic pollutant; Phytoremediation; Typha latifolia Bioremediation; Detoxification; Peptides; Tissue; Water pollution; 2 ,4 dichlorophenol(2 ,4 dcp); 2 ,4-Dichlorophenol; Detoxification mechanism; Glutathione S-transferases; Operation and maintenance; Phenolic pollutants; Phytoremediation; Typha latifolia; Plants (botany); 2,4 dichlorophenol; glutathione; glutathione transferase; xenobiotic agent; 2,4-dichlorophenol; anthelmintic agent; chlorophenol; glutathione transferase; water pollutant; bioaccumulation; biotransformation; chemical pollutant; concentration (composition); detoxification; enzyme activity; growth rate; herb; phenolic compound; phytoremediation; pollutant removal; Article; biomass; biotransformation; chlorophyll content; controlled study; detoxification; growth rate; hydrolysis; nonhuman; plant growth; Typha latifolia; bioremediation; drug effects; drug tolerance; ecosystem restoration; isolation and purification; metabolism; plant root; procedures; Typhaceae; water pollutant; Typha latifolia; Anthelmintics; Biodegradation, Environmental; Biotransformation; Chlorophenols; Drug Tolerance; Environmental Restoration and Remediation; Glutathione Transferase; Plant Roots; Typhaceae; Water Pollutants, Chemical
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