Publications by authors named "Julian O D Coleman"

Negligent industrial development has greatly contributed to environmental pollution through the contamination of water and soil by xenobiotic organic chemicals Remedial strategies to deal with chemical pollution require reliable methods to identify and monitor contamination, as well as effective procedures to attenuate or to eliminate the pollutant. In the food chain, plants are ideally placed as early bio-indicators of environmental pollution as they experience and respond to environmental toxicants sooner than organisms at higher trophic levels. Furthermore, some plants are capable of detoxifying anthropogenic chemicals by metabolic transformation and could prove useful for the remediation of contaminated water and soil: so-called phytoremediation.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examined how two plants, Arabidopsis and soybean, metabolize the chemical 3,4-dichloroaniline (DCA) over 48 hours after root treatment.
  • Both plants quickly absorbed DCA and converted it primarily into different metabolites: N-malonyl-DCA in soybean and N-glucosyl-DCA in Arabidopsis, which were mostly released into the surrounding medium.
  • The differences in detoxification routes between the plants were linked to their enzyme activities, with soybean showing higher levels of DCA-N-malonyltransferase, while Arabidopsis had more DCA-N-glucosyltransferase activity, indicating varied regulatory responses to DCA exposure.
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Weed control by herbicides has helped us to create the green revolution and to provide food for at least the majority of human beings living today. However, some herbicides remain in the environment and pose an ecological problem. The present review describes the properties and fate of four representative herbicides known to be presistent in ecosystems.

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