The role of epigenetic and epitranscriptomic modifications in plants exposed to non-essential metals

Front Plant Sci. 2023 Dec 4:14:1278185. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2023.1278185. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Contamination of the soil with non-essential metals and metalloids is a serious problem in many regions of the world. These non-essential metals and metalloids are toxic to all organisms impacting crop yields and human health. Crop plants exposed to high concentrations of these metals leads to perturbed mineral homeostasis, decreased photosynthesis efficiency, inhibited cell division, oxidative stress, genotoxic effects and subsequently hampered growth. Plants can activate epigenetic and epitranscriptomic mechanisms to maintain cellular and organism homeostasis. Epigenetic modifications include changes in the patterns of cytosine and adenine DNA base modifications, changes in cellular non-coding RNAs, and remodeling histone variants and covalent histone tail modifications. Some of these epigenetic changes have been shown to be long-lasting and may therefore contribute to stress memory and modulated stress tolerance in the progeny. In the emerging field of epitranscriptomics, defined as chemical, covalent modifications of ribonucleotides in cellular transcripts, epitranscriptomic modifications are postulated as more rapid modulators of gene expression. Although significant progress has been made in understanding the plant's epigenetic changes in response to biotic and abiotic stresses, a comprehensive review of the plant's epigenetic responses to metals is lacking. While the role of epitranscriptomics during plant developmental processes and stress responses are emerging, epitranscriptomic modifications in response to metals has not been reviewed. This article describes the impact of non-essential metals and metalloids (Cd, Pb, Hg, Al and As) on global and site-specific DNA methylation, histone tail modifications and epitranscriptomic modifications in plants.

Keywords: 5-methylcytosine; 8-hydroxyguanosine; 8-nitroguanosine; M6A; N6-methyladenosine; histone modifications.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. The work is an outcome of the Bekker Scholarship financed by the Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange, NAWA (BPN/BEK/2021/2/00007/U/00001). Research understanding metal impacts on plant epitranscriptomics is carried out at the Department of Plant Ecophysiology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland, and is financed by the Polish National Science Centre under project number 2019/33/B/NZ9/00058. Epitranscriptomic research at The University of Adelaide awarded to IS funded by an Australian Research Council grant (ARC) DP190101303.