Title of article
Transgenic tobacco plants expressing a rice cysteine synthase gene are tolerant to toxic levels of cadmium
Author/Authors
Emiko Harada، نويسنده , , Yong-Eui Choi، نويسنده , , Atsunari Tsuchisaka، نويسنده , , Hitoshi Obata، نويسنده , , Hiroshi Sano، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
7
From page
655
To page
661
Abstract
Plants tolerate heavy metals through sequestration with cysteine-rich peptides, phytochelatins. In this reaction, the rate limiting step is considered to be the supply of cysteine, which is synthesized by cysteine synthase (CS, EC 4.2.99.8) from hydrogen sulfide andO-acetylserine. In this study, we transformed tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants withRCS1, a cytosolic cysteine synthase gene of rice (Oryza sativa), and examined their sensitivity to cadmium. The transgenic plants had up to 3-fold higher activity of cysteine synthase than wild-type plants. Upon exposure to cadmium, they exhibited obvious tolerance with much greater growth than wild-type plants. The level of phytochelatins in shoots was higher in transgenic than in wild-type plants after cadmium treatment, suggesting that cadmium was actively trapped by phytochelatins. However, the cadmium concentration per g fresh weight of whole transgenic plants was 20 percnt; lower than that of wild-type plants, suggesting cadmium to be either actively excreted or diluted by fast growth. Genetic analysis of progenies clearly showed segregation of cadmium tolerance, indicating that the trait resulted from the introduced gene. These results suggest that introduction of a cysteine synthase gene into tobacco plants resulted not only in high level production of sulfur-containing compounds that detoxify cadmium, but also in active elimination of cadmium toxicity from plant bodies.
Journal title
Journal of Plant Physiology
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Journal of Plant Physiology
Record number
1279470
Link To Document