Litcius/Paper detail

Minimized Atrazine Risks to Crop Security and Its Residue in the Environment by a Rice Methyltransferase as a Regulation Factor

LI Ya, Ai Ping Zhang, Jintong Liu, Nan Zhang, Min Chen, Hong Yang

2021Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Atrazine (ATZ) is an agricultural pesticide for controlling field weeds. ATZ accumulates in many crops, posing high risks to crop production and food safety. Characterizing one of the novel rice MT genes named Oryza sativa atrazine-responsive methyltransferase (OsARM) showed that the expression of OsARM was associated with DNA demethylation (hypomethylation) in its promoter region. The enhancement of OsARM expression was manifested by the attenuated symptoms of ATZ toxicity including better growth and lower ATZ accumulation in plants. The promoted capacity of detoxification was confirmed by transgenic rice overexpression OsARM lines and also functionally proved by CRISPR-Cas9 knockout mutants. The transgenic lines accumulate more ATZ metabolites in rice and lower concentrations in the growth environment, pointing out that ATZ metabolism or degradation can be intensified. The ATZ-induced DNA demethylation is an important hallmark representing the epigenetic mechanism, which is required for the extra OsARM expression to facilitate ATZ disappearance in rice and the environment.

Topics & Concepts

AtrazineOryza sativaGenetically modified riceDemethylationDNA methylationEpigeneticsDNA demethylationGenetically modified cropsTransgeneMethyltransferaseDNA methyltransferaseGenetically modified maizeMutantPesticideBiologyCropChemistryGene expressionGeneMethylationAgronomyBiochemistryPesticide and Herbicide Environmental StudiesCassava research and cyanideWeed Control and Herbicide Applications