Monday, 08-06-2026 | 08:04
Cadmium (Cd) contamination in agricultural soils poses a significant threat to global food safety. Reducing grain Cd accumulation in rice, a primary dietary source of this toxic metal, is therefore an urgent priority. This study identified and characterized a novel UDP-glycosyltransferase gene, Os79 (LOC_Os04g12970), which functions as a key negative regulator of Cd tolerance and accumulation in rice.
Updated News
- Researchers Find Key Gene for Cadmium Tolerance and Accumulation in Rice
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- Nutrition-Sensitive Trade: What Zanzibar’s Dagaa Fishery Reveals About Food and Nutrition Security
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Scientific news
- Os79, a UDP‐Glycosyltransferase, negatively regulates cadmium tolerance and accumulation in rice
- CRISPR/Cas9 mediated knockout of MeSSI enhances resistant starch content without compromising yield in cassava
- Genetic identification of Pid3-1 and its regulatory role in promoting blast resistance in rice
- CRISPR-Mediated Gene Editing for Inducing Thermosensitive Genic Male Sterility and Sheath Blight Resistance in Rice
- (E)-2-Hexenal Combats Rice Sheath Blight Through Direct Pathogen Inhibition and Host Defense Reprogramming
- Genetic mapping and diagnostic marker development for a co-localization interval conferring resistance to both Aspergillus flavus infection and aflatoxin production in peanut
- AI-designed OpenCRISPR-1 performs robust knockout, base editing, and prime editing in rice
- The effector NlOBP1b from the brown planthopper suppresses rice immunity by manipulating the OsCK2 complex
- OsCBL10 negatively regulates salt tolerance at seedling stage in rice
- Water stress tolerance, genomic selection and identification of genomic regions in a MAGIC population of eggplant
- Rorippa islandica is a genetically accessible dicot model system to study flooding tolerance
- Genetic dissection of oil content in maize kernel using combined genome-wide association analysis and linkage mapping
- A candidate gene marker at the red kidney color locus (Rk) enables the development of slow-darkening pink beans
- Breeding for next-generation biotic stress-tolerant pigeonpea for sustainable food legume production
- Reprogramming immunity: TAL effector-informed genome editing in rice and other crops
Monday, 08-06-2026 | 01:02
Cadmium is a toxic heavy metal found in some farming soils that can seep into rice crops, posing a serious threat to global food safety. To tackle this, scientists discovered a specific gene in rice, Os79, that accidentally acts as an open door for this toxin. By using gene-editing technology to turn this gene off, researchers at the Chinese Academy of Sciences created a modified rice plant that is much better at defending itself. When the gene is disabled, the rice plants grow normally even in polluted soils and absorb significantly less cadmium, keeping the grain much safer for consumers.
Monday, 08-06-2026 | 01:04
Cadmium (Cd) contamination in agricultural soils poses a significant threat to global food safety. Reducing grain Cd accumulation in rice, a primary dietary source of this toxic metal, is therefore an urgent priority. This study identified and characterized a novel UDP-glycosyltransferase gene, Os79 (LOC_Os04g12970), which functions as a key negative regulator of Cd tolerance and accumulation in rice.
Monday, 08-06-2026 | 01:03
As animal cells rely on waste management to survive, plant cells utilize a specialized recycling system called the ubiquitin-proteasome system to degrade damaged or redundant proteins. In this process, small molecular tags called ubiquitin are attached to target proteins, marking them for destruction. The precision of this system depends on regulatory proteins known as E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes (UBCs), which dictate which proteins are targeted based on environmental stress and growth hormones. While these molecular regulators have been extensively mapped in crops like rice and maize, their composition and function in long-lived, woody perennial species remain largely unexplored.




















