4.7 Review

Epigenetic Control of Plant Response to Heavy Metals

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants12183195

Keywords

plant epigenetics; heavy metal tolerance; potentially toxic elements; plant growth promoting bacteria

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This review summarizes the epigenetic response of plants to soil contamination by heavy metals and metalloids, as well as the transgenerational transfer of this epigenetic status, with consideration of the impact of the microbial community inhabiting the rhizosphere.
Plants are sessile organisms that must adapt to environmental conditions, such as soil characteristics, by adjusting their development during their entire life cycle. In case of low-distance seed dispersal, the new generations are challenged with the same abiotic stress encountered by the parents. Epigenetic modification is an effective option that allows plants to face an environmental constraint and to share the same adaptative strategy with their progeny through transgenerational inheritance. This is the topic of the presented review that reports the scientific progress, up to date, gained in unravelling the epigenetic response of plants to soil contamination by heavy metals and metalloids, collectively known as potentially toxic elements. The effect of the microbial community inhabiting the rhizosphere is also considered, as the evidence of a transgenerational transfer of the epigenetic status that contributes to the activation in plants of response mechanisms to soil pollution.

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