Microbial Interactions and Bacterial Responses to Metal Stress in Plants: Mechanisms, Adaptations, and Applications for Sustainable Agriculture

This review critically examines the dynamic interactions between plants and microbes under metal stress, focusing on specific microbial communities and their roles in reducing metal toxicity.

Published in Plant Science

Microbial Interactions and Bacterial Responses to Metal Stress in Plants: Mechanisms, Adaptations, and Applications for Sustainable Agriculture
Like

Share this post

Choose a social network to share with, or copy the URL to share elsewhere

This is a representation of how your post may appear on social media. The actual post will vary between social networks

Explore the Research

SpringerLink
SpringerLink SpringerLink

Microbial Interactions and Bacterial Responses to Metal Stress in Plants: Mechanisms, Adaptations, and Applications for Sustainable Agriculture - Journal of Crop Health

Metal stress in plants poses a significant challenge to global agriculture, reducing crop productivity and threatening food security. While recent advancements in microbiology and bacteriology have revealed the potential of plant-associated microbes to alleviate heavy metal toxicity, practical applications remain constrained by knowledge gaps and environmental variability. This review critically examines the dynamic interactions between plants and microbes under metal stress, focusing on specific microbial communities and their multifaceted roles in reducing metal toxicity. Key bacterial mechanisms, including biofilm formation, metal sequestration, antioxidant production, and stress-related gene expression, are explored for their contributions to plant resilience. Additionally, we discuss the diverse strategies employed by bacteria, such as the production of siderophores, phytohormones, and extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), to enhance metal tolerance in plants. Special emphasis is placed on the contributions of rhizobacteria, endophytes, and other plant-growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB) in bioremediation and sustainable agriculture. The review also highlights challenges, such as the variability of microbial efficacy in different environmental contexts, and emphasizes the need for field-scale studies to validate laboratory findings. By integrating microbial insights with plant physiological responses, this review provides a critical framework for harnessing microbial interventions to combat metal stress and achieve sustainable agricultural practices in metal-contaminated environments.

Metal stress in plants poses a significant challenge to global agriculture, reducing crop productivity and threatening food security. While recent advancements in microbiology and bacteriology have revealed the potential of plant-associated microbes to alleviate heavy metal toxicity, practical applications remain constrained by knowledge gaps and environmental variability. This review critically examines the dynamic interactions between plants and microbes under metal stress, focusing on specific microbial communities and their multifaceted roles in reducing metal toxicity. Key bacterial mechanisms, including biofilm formation, metal sequestration, antioxidant production, and stress-related gene expression, are explored for their contributions to plant resilience. Additionally, we discuss the diverse strategies employed by bacteria, such as the production of siderophores, phytohormones, and extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), to enhance metal tolerance in plants. Special emphasis is placed on the contributions of rhizobacteria, endophytes, and other plant-growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB) in bioremediation and sustainable agriculture. The review also highlights challenges, such as the variability of microbial efficacy in different environmental contexts, and emphasizes the need for field-scale studies to validate laboratory findings. By integrating microbial insights with plant physiological responses, this review provides a critical framework for harnessing microbial interventions to combat metal stress and achieve sustainable agricultural practices in metal-contaminated environments.

Please sign in or register for FREE

If you are a registered user on Research Communities by Springer Nature, please sign in

Follow the Topic

Plant Science
Life Sciences > Biological Sciences > Plant Science

Related Collections

With Collections, you can get published faster and increase your visibility.

Sensors and digital tools for Crop Health

This collection aims to publish recent advances of non-invasive techniques to detect, identify, predict and model crop health with a focus on its application in the field and practice. Possible topics include sensors to detect plant pests and diseases, digital tools and methods for prediction and modeling in crop protection, development of non-invasive techniques, sensors for pest and disease identification, and other related topics.

Publishing Model: Hybrid

Deadline: Ongoing

Advancing Sustainable Crop Protection through IoT and Deep Learning for Pest and Disease Detection in Smart Agriculture

This collection highlights converging IoT and DL technologies to design sustainable crop protection and improve crop health in smart agriculture. It emphasizes data analytics, AI modeling and intelligent decision-support systems for preliminary disease and pest detection, precision agriculture and efficient resource utilization by data-driven inputs. The submissions of innovative IoT data application, AI-based detection and predictive models and digital solutions improving crop health, robustness and environmental sustainability are welcome.

Publishing Model: Hybrid

Deadline: Mar 30, 2026