Editing
Silicon
Transporter Genes to Reduce Arsenic
Accumulation in Rice
Posted on 2024-01-17 - 18:38
Rice
is a dominant source of inorganic arsenic (As) exposure
for
populations consuming rice as a staple food. Decreasing As accumulation
in rice grain is important for improving food safety. Arsenite [As(III)],
the main form of As in paddy soil porewater, is taken up inadvertently
by OsLsi1 and OsLsi2, the two key transporters for silicon (Si) uptake
in rice roots. Here, we investigated whether editing OsLsi1 or OsLsi2 can decrease As accumulation in rice
grain without compromising grain yield. We used the CRISPR-Cas9 technology
to edit the promoter region of OsLsi1 and the C-terminal
coding sequence of OsLsi1 and OsLsi2, and we generated a total of 27 mutants. Uptake and accumulation
of Si and As were evaluated in both short-term hydroponic experiments
and in a paddy field. Deletion of 1.2–2 kb of the OsLsi1 promoter suppressed OsLsi1 expression in roots
and Si uptake markedly and did not affect As(III) uptake or grain
As concentration. Some of the OsLsi1 and OsLsi2 coding sequence mutants showed large decreases in
the uptake of Si and As(III) as well as large decreases in Si accumulation
in rice husks. However, only OsLsi2 mutants showed
significant decreases (by up to 63%) in the grain total As concentration.
Editing OsLsi2 mainly affected the accumulation of
inorganic As in rice grain with little effect on the accumulation
of dimethylarsenate (DMA). Grain yields of the OsLsi2 mutants were comparable to those of the wild type. Editing OsLsi2 provides a promising way to reduce As accumulation
in rice grain without compromising the grain yield.