Abstract

The heavy metal cadmium (Cd), known for its high toxicity, poses a grave threat to human health through the food chain. N6-methyladenosine (m6A), the most abundant internal modification, regulates plant adaptation to various adversities, yet the panorama of m6A modifications in switchgrass under cadmium stress remains elusive. This study examines the physiological responses of switchgrass roots and shoots exposed to 50 μM CdCl2, alongside an overview of transcriptome-wide m6A methylation patterns. After cadmium treatment, methylation modifications are primarily enriched near stop codons and the 3′UTR region, with a negative correlation between m6A modification and gene expression levels. In shoots, approximately 58 % of DEGs with m6A modifications show upregulation in expression and decrease in m6A peaks, including zinc transporter 4-like (ZIP4). In roots, about 43 % of DEGs with m6A modifications exhibit downregulation in expression and increase in m6A peaks, such as the ABC transporter family member (ABCG25). We further validate the m6A enrichment, gene expression and mRNA stability of ZIP4 in response to Cd treatment. The results suggest that the negative correlation of m6A enrichment and gene expression is due to altered mRNA stability. Our study establishes an m6A regulatory network governing cadmium transport in switchgrass roots and shoots, offering new avenues for candidate gene manipulation in phytoremediation applications of heavy metal pollution.

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