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Journal ArticleDOI

How plants control arsenic accumulation.

02 Dec 2014-PLOS Biology (Public Library of Science)-Vol. 12, Iss: 12
TL;DR: An arsenic-reducing enzyme is identified in the plant Arabidopsis thaliana and it is shown that this protein is critical to arsenic elimination, making a compelling case that HAC1 is part of a major defense against arsenic in plants.
Abstract: In many parts of the world, groundwater contains so much arsenic that it builds up in irrigated crops. Linked to cancer and heart disease, this toxic element is particularly worrisome in rice, which absorbs arsenic more readily than other grains and is a staple for billions of people. Countries with the double whammy of arsenic-laced groundwater and heavy rice consumption include Bangladesh, India, and China. While plants can detoxify arsenic, we don't know precisely how they do it. In this issue of PLOS Biology, the collaborative team of Dai-Yin Chao, Fang-Jie Zhao, and David E. Salt identify an arsenic-reducing enzyme in the plant Arabidopsis thaliana and show that this protein is critical to arsenic elimination (Figure 1). Figure 1 Arsenic is toxic, and its elimination from plants requires it to be converted into arsenite, a form of arsenic that can be released back into the soil from roots. Inorganic arsenic (arsenate) resembles phosphate and, once taken up by roots, likely loads via phosphate transporters into the xylem, which delivers water and nutrients to the shoots. Plants get rid of arsenate by reducing it to arsenite, a form that no longer mimics phosphate and is readily extruded from the roots back into the soil. To find the enzyme that transforms arsenate into arsenite in plants, the researchers used genome-wide association mapping, which links phenotypes—in this case, arsenic levels in leaves—to genes. They grew 349 types of A. thaliana collected from around the world at an environmentally relevant concentration of arsenic, and found that leaf arsenic levels varied more than 20-fold and that this variation was associated with a region of chromosome 2. Comparison of strains with high and average arsenic levels (Kr-0 and Col-0, respectively) showed that the former has a cytosine at a specific nucleotide in this region, while the latter has a thymine in the same spot. Crossing the two strains showed that arsenic was high in about 25% of the offspring, suggesting that leaf arsenic levels are controlled primarily by a single gene. Named High Arsenic Content 1 (HAC1), this gene has a predicted amino acid domain characteristic of arsenate reductases. To verify that this newly discovered enzyme reduces arsenate to the easily eliminated arsenite, Chao and colleagues expressed HAC1 in an Escherichia coli mutant that lacks its own arsenate reductase. As expected, HAC1 restored arsenic elimination in this E. coli mutant. In addition, the team found that HAC1 is expressed in the roots and that root expression rises in A. thaliana exposed to arsenate. Moreover, in A. thaliana mutants that lack HAC1, arsenic stunted both root and overall plant growth. The latter is important because it shows that HAC1 also keeps arsenic low in shoots, which are often the edible part of a plant. Another important finding is that arsenite extrusion is dramatically reduced in an HAC1 mutant A. thaliana exposed to arsenate, suggesting that this arsenate-reducing enzyme may be coupled with the arsenite efflux transporter. Besides making a compelling case that HAC1 is part of a major defense against arsenic in plants, Chao and colleagues cleared up a mystery over a previous candidate for this job. Yeast reduces arsenate with an enzyme called ACR2, and initial studies had suggested that plants use a similar enzyme to detoxify arsenic. It turned out, however, that this ACR2-like enzyme reduces arsenate only in vitro and not in living plants. This apparent discrepancy is resolved by the fact that the two plant arsenate reductases (ACR2 and the newly discovered HAC1) share a similar DNA sequence, suggesting that experiments meant to knock out ACR2 actually knocked out HAC1. To dispel any lingering doubts that ACR2 may still play a role in plant arsenic detoxification by interacting with HAC1, the researchers compared arsenic in an A. thaliana mutant that lacks HAC1 to a double mutant that lacks both HAC1 and ACR2. As expected, arsenic metabolism was similar in the two mutants, confirming that ACR2 has no impact on arsenic detoxification and elimination in plants. Using a different method, Eduardo Sanchez-Bermejo and colleagues also recently identified the same gene, which they called ATQ1, showing that it encodes an arsenate reductase enzyme involved in plant tolerance to arsenate. However, Chao and colleagues went further by revealing the functional role of HAC1 in arsenic accumulation and arsenate resistance. The researchers caution that when highly active, this arsenate reducing gene may come at a cost to plants, which could diminish production. That said, their work has tremendous potential to benefit human health. Their key finding—that HAC1 keeps arsenic low in shoots of plants grown at real-world arsenic levels—is a much needed first step toward developing crops that can be grown in high-arsenic regions and still be safe to eat. Chao D-Y, Chen Y, Chen J, Shi S, Chen Z, et al. (2014) Genome-wide Association Mapping Identifies a New Arsenate Reductase Enzyme Critical for Limiting Arsenic Accumulation in Plants. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1002009

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review aims to provide current updates about the biochemical and molecular networks involved in As uptake by plants and the recent developments in the area of functional genomics in terms of developing As tolerant and low As accumulating plants.

203 citations


Cites background from "How plants control arsenic accumula..."

  • ...This arsenate-reducing enzyme controls arsenic accumulation in plants and keeps arsenic low in the shoots, which provides an important new resource to engineer low-As rice (Meadows, 2014)....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This comprehensive review encompasses the mechanisms of transport, metabolism, and tolerance that plants show in response to As, as well as some recent advancement in plant breeding, genetic modifications and remediation approaches to overcome soil and food contamination problems.

197 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is evident that proper supply of S nutrition may be helpful in prevention of As accumulation in aerial parts of plant as well as As induced toxicity.

136 citations


Cites background from "How plants control arsenic accumula..."

  • ...PC-AsIII complex is transported to vacuole that reduces the free As concentration in cytoplasm (Meadows, 2014)....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
21 Jan 2020
TL;DR: Amongst the agronomic strategies in diminishing the uptake and accumulation of As in rice, using microalgae and bacteria is the most efficient.
Abstract: Rice consumption is a source of arsenic (As) exposure, which poses serious health risks. In this study, the accumulation of As in rice was studied. Research shows that As accumulation in rice in Taiwan and Bangladesh is higher than that in other countries. In addition, the critical factors influencing the uptake of As into rice crops are defined. Furthermore, determining the feasibility of using effective ways to reduce the accumulation of As in rice was studied. AsV and AsIII are transported to the root through phosphate transporters and nodulin 26-like intrinsic channels. The silicic acid transporter may have a vital role in the entry of methylated As, dimethylarsinic acid (DMA) and monomethylarsonic acid (MMA), into the root. Amongst As species, DMA(V) is particularly mobile in plants and can easily transfer from root to shoot. The OsPTR7 gene has a key role in moving DMA in the xylem or phloem. Soil properties can affect the uptake of As by plants. An increase in organic matter and in the concentrations of sulphur, iron, and manganese reduces the uptake of As by plants. Amongst the agronomic strategies in diminishing the uptake and accumulation of As in rice, using microalgae and bacteria is the most efficient.

78 citations


Cites background from "How plants control arsenic accumula..."

  • ...HAC1 contributes to the defence against As in plants [71] and is essential for the efflux of AsIII from roots for AsV detoxification [72]....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The role of H2O2 as a signaling molecule is shown in the protection of photosynthetic activity in rice from As toxicity through regulation on the activity and the expression of antioxidant enzymes.

62 citations