| Literature DB >> 24639682 |
Danuta M Antosiewicz1, Anna Barabasz1, Oskar Siemianowski1.
Abstract
Metal hyperaccumulating plants are able to store very large amounts of metals in their shoots. There are a number of reasons why it is important to be able to introduce metal hyperaccumulation traits into non-accumulating species (e.g., phytoremediation or biofortification in minerals) and to engineer a desired level of accumulation and distribution of metals. Metal homeostasis genes have therefore been used for these purposes. Engineered accumulation levels, however, have often been far from expected, and transgenic plants frequently display phenotypic features not related to the physiological function of the introduced gene. In this review, we focus on an aspect often neglected in research on plants expressing metal homeostasis genes: the specific regulation of endogenous metal homeostasis genes of the host plant in response to the transgene-induced imbalance of the metal status. These modifications constitute one of the major mechanisms involved in the generation of the plant's phenotype, including unexpected characteristics. Interestingly, activation of so-called "metal cross-homeostasis" has emerged as a factor of primary importance.Entities:
Keywords: cadmium (Cd); heavy metal; hyperaccumulation; nickel (Ni); overexpression; plant transformation; zinc (Zn)
Year: 2014 PMID: 24639682 PMCID: PMC3945530 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2014.00080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
List of transformations discussed in the review; shown are the genes and species used for transformation, and identified metal-homeostasis genes differentially expressed in transformants relative to wild-type (WT) or vector-controls (VC).
Zn-supply dependent modifications of Zn concentration in the shoots of plants expressing genes listed in the first column (relative to wild-type).
| 35S:: | Tobacco | ND | – | H | ND | – | ND | Siemianowski et al., |
| 35S:: | Tobacco | H | – | H | L | – | L | |
| 35S:: | Tobacco | ND | – | ND | L | – | L | |
| Tobacco | H | L | ND | – | ND | ND | Barabasz et al., | |
| Tomato | – | ND | H | – | – | – | Barabasz et al., | |
| 35S:: | Tobacco | – | ND | H | ND | – | – | Barabasz et al., |
| 35S:: | Tobacco | ND | – | L | – | – | – | Barabasz et al., |
Changes in Zn concentrations in shoots of transgenic tobacco or tomato (relative to wild-type) due to expression of a given gene, grown in the presence of 0.5; 1; 10; 100; 150; and 200 μM Zn, were marked as: ND, no difference between transgenic and wild-type plant; H, higher in transgenic plants than in wild-type; L, lower in transgenic plants than in wild-type; –, not examined;
, only in upper leaves.