4.7 Article

Strigolactones regulate arsenate uptake, vacuolar-sequestration and antioxidant defense responses to resist arsenic toxicity in rice roots

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 415, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.125589

Keywords

Arsenic toxicity; Phosphate transporters; Glutathione metabolism; Oxidative stress; Rice; Strigolactones

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS)
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFD0100304]
  3. National Key R&D Program (NKP) from Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China [2018YFE0194000]
  4. Cabinet Office, Government of Japan, Cross-ministerial Moonshot Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Research and Development Program, Technologies for Smart Bio-industry and Agriculture (Bio-oriented Technology Research Advancement Institution) [JPJ009237]

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The study revealed that strigolactones are involved in mitigating arsenic stress in rice roots by regulating arsenate uptake, glutathione biosynthesis, vacuolar sequestration of arsenic, and antioxidant defense responses.
We explored genetic evidence for strigolactones' role in rice tolerance to arsenate-stress. Comparative analyses of roots of wild-type (WT) and strigolactone-deficient mutants d10 and d17 in response to sodium arsenate (Na2AsO4) revealed differential growth inhibition [WT (11.28%) vs. d10 (19.76%) and d17 (18.03%)], biomass reduction [(WT (33.65%) vs. d10 (74.86%) and d17 (60.65%)] and membrane damage (WT < d10 and d17) at 250 mu M Na2AsO4. Microscopic and biochemical analyses showed that roots of WT accumulated lower levels of arsenic and oxidative stress indicators like reactive oxygen species and malondialdehyde than those of strigolactone-deficient mutants. qRT-PCR data indicated lower expression levels of genes (OsPT1, OsPT2, OsPT4 and OsPT8) encoding phosphate-transporters in WT roots than mutant roots, explaining the decreased arsenate and phosphate uptake by WT roots. Increased levels of glutathione and OsPCS1 and OsABCC1 transcripts indicated an efficient vacuolar-sequestration of arsenic in WT roots. Furthermore, higher activities (transcript levels) of SOD (OsCuZnSOD1 and OsCuZnSOD2), APX (OsAPX1 and OsAPX2) and CAT (OsCATA) corresponded to lower oxidative damage in WT roots compared with strigolactone-mutant roots. Collectively, these results highlight that strigolactones are involved in arsenic-stress mitigation by regulating arsenate-uptake, glutathione-biosynthesis, vacuolar-sequestration of arsenic and antioxidant defense responses in rice roots.

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