Genome-Wide and Transcriptomic Analyses Reveal That HcERF37 Activates HcPDR1 to Confer Cadmium Tolerance in Kenaf.
Cao S, Wang Q, Rehmat U, Li R, Chen P
Phytoremediation
Cadmium quietly builds up in garden soils from phosphate fertilizers and industrial dust, then moves into the vegetables you grow — understanding how plants actively push it back out is the first step toward crops that protect you rather than concentrate the poison.
Kenaf is a tall, fast-growing plant related to okra and hibiscus that researchers are studying because it can grow in polluted soils. Scientists found a kind of molecular 'switch' inside kenaf that, when turned on by cadmium contamination, activates a pump that pushes the toxic metal back out of the plant's cells. Plants with this switch turned up stayed healthier, germinated better, and absorbed less cadmium — which could eventually lead to food crops that are safer to grow in polluted ground.
Key Findings
Researchers identified 213 members of the AP2/ERF gene family in kenaf and found that HcERF37 is strongly activated by cadmium exposure.
Arabidopsis plants engineered to overexpress HcERF37 showed improved seed germination, better seedling growth, stronger antioxidant defenses, and significantly reduced cadmium accumulation compared to controls.
HcERF37 works by directly binding to the promoter region of HcPDR1, a transporter gene that pumps cadmium ions out of cells, establishing a two-gene regulatory axis responsible for cadmium tolerance.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Scientists discovered that a gene called HcERF37 in kenaf (a fast-growing fiber crop) helps the plant survive cadmium pollution by activating another gene that pumps the toxic metal out of cells. This opens a path to engineering crops that can tolerate or clean up cadmium-contaminated soils.
Abstract Preview
Cadmium (Cd) stress severely compromises crop growth and yields globally. The APETALA2/Ethylene-Responsive Factor (AP2/ERF) family is essential in modulating plant tolerance to Cd. However, the mol...
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Kenaf [etymology: Persian], Hibiscus cannabinus, is a plant in the family Malvaceae also called Deccan hemp and Java jute. Hibiscus cannabinus is in the genus Hibiscus and is native to Africa, though its exact origin is unknown. The name also applies to the fibre obtained from this plant. Kenaf i...