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1.
The role of Ca2+ transport in the mechanism of Al toxicity was investigated, using a Ca2+-selective microelectrode system to study Al effects on root apical Ca2+ fluxes in two wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars: Al-tolerant Atlas 66 and Al-sensitive Scout 66. Intact 3-day-old low-salt-grown (100 micromolar CaCl2, pH 4.5) wheat seedlings were used, and it was found that both cultivars maintained similar rates of net Ca2+ uptake in the absence of Al. Addition of Al concentrations that were toxic to Scout (5-20 micromolar AlCl3) immediately and dramatically inhibited Ca2+ uptake in Scout, whereas Ca2+ transport in Atlas was relatively unaffected. The Al-induced inhibition of Ca2+ uptake in Scout 66 was rapidly reversed following removal of Al from the solution bathing the roots. Similar studies with morphologically intact root cell wall preparations indicated that the Al effects did not involve Al-Ca interactions in the cell wall. These results suggest that Al inhibits Ca2+ influx across the root plasmalemma, possibly via blockage of calcium channels. The differential effect of Al on Ca2+ transport in Al-sensitive Scout and Al-tolerant Atlas suggests that Al blockage of Ca2+ channels could play a role in the cellular mechanism of Al toxicity in higher plants.  相似文献   

2.
The role of Al interactions with root-cell plasma membrane (PM) Ca2+ channels in Al toxicity and resistance was studied. The experimental approach involved the imposition of a transmembrane electrical potential (via K+ diffusion) in right-side-out PM vesicles derived from roots of two wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars (Al-sensitive Scout 66 and Al-resistant Atlas 66). We previously used this technique to characterize a voltage-dependent Ca2+ channel in the wheat root PM (J.W. Huang, D.L. Grunes, L.V. Kochian [1994] Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 91: 3473-3477). We found that Al3+ effectively blocked this PM Ca2+ channel; however, Al3+ blocked this Ca2+ channel equally well in both the Al-sensitive and -resistant cultivars. It was found that the differential genotypic sensitivity of this Ca2+ transport system to Al in intact roots versus isolated PM vesicles was due to Al-induced malate exudation localized to the root apex in Al-resistant Atlas but not in Al-sensitive Scout. Because malate can effectively chelate Al3+ in the rhizosphere and exclude it from the root apex, the differential sensitivity of Ca2+ influx to Al in intact roots of Al-resistant versus Al-sensitive wheat cultivars is probably due to the maintenance of lower Al3+ activities in the root apical rhizosphere of the resistant cultivar.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of aluminum on the concentration-dependent kinetics of Ca2+ uptake were studied in two winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars, Al-tolerant Atlas 66 and Al-sensitive Scout 66. Seedlings were grown in 100 M CaCl2 solution (pH 4.5) for 3 d. Subsequently, net Ca2+ fluxes in intact roots were measured using a highly sensitive technique, employing a vibrating Ca2+-selective microelectrode. The kinetics of Ca2+ uptake into cells of the root apex, for external Ca2+ concentrations from 20 to 300 M, were found to be quite similar for both cultivars in the absence of external Al; Ca2+ transport could be described by Michaelis-Menten kinetics. When roots were exposed to solutions containing levels of Al that were toxic to Al-sensitive Scout 66 but not to Atlas 66 (5 to 20 M total Al), a strong correlation was observed between Al toxicity and Al-induced inhibition of Ca2+ absorption by root apices. For Scout 66, exposure to Al immediately and dramatically inhibited Ca2+ uptake over the entire Ca2+ concentration range used for these experiments. Kinetic analyses of the Al-Ca interactions in Scout 66 roots were consistent with competitive inhibition of Ca2+ uptake by Al. For example, exposure of Scout 66 roots to increasing Al levels (from 0 to 10 M) caused the K m for Ca2+ uptake to increase with each rise in Al concentration, from approx. 100 M in the absence of Al to approx. 300 M in the presence of 10 M Al, while having no effect on the V max. The same Al exposures had little effect on the kinetics of Ca2+ uptake into roots of Atlas 66. The results of this study indicate that Al disruption of Ca2+ transport at the root apex may play an important role in the mechanisms of Al toxicity in Al-sensitive wheat cultivars, and that differential Al tolerance may be associated with the ability of Ca2+-transport systems in cells of the root apex to resist disruption by potentially toxic levels of Al in the soil solution.We would like to thank Dr. Lionel F. Jaffe, Director of the National Vibrating Probe Facility, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass., USA, for making his calcium-selective vibrating-mi-croelectrode system available for a portion of this work. The research presented here was supported in part by USDA/NRI Competitive Grant number 91-37100-6630 to Leon Kochian. Contribution from the USDA-ARS, U.S. Plant, Soil and Nutrition Laboratory, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y. This research was part of the program of the Center for Root-Soil Research, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y. Department of Soil, Crop and Atmosphere Science, paper No. 1741.  相似文献   

4.
The inhibition of root growth by aluminum (Al) is well established, yet a unifying mechanism for Al toxicity remains unclear. The association between cell growth and endogenously generated ionic currents measured in many different systems, including plant roots, suggests that these currents may be directing growth. A vibrating voltage microelectrode system was used to measure the net ionic currents at the apex of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) roots from Al-tolerant and Al-sensitive cultivars. We examined the relationship between these currents and Al-induced inhibition of root growth. In the Al-sensitive cultivar, Scout 66, 10 micromolar Al (pH 4.5) began to inhibit the net current and root elongation within 1 to 3 hours. These changes occurred concurrently in 75% of experiments. A significant correlation was found between current magnitude and the rate of root growth when data were pooled. No changes in either current magnitude or growth rate were observed in similar experiments using the Al-tolerant cultivar Atlas 66. Measurements with ion-selective microelectrodes suggested that H+ influx was responsible for most of the current at the apex, with smaller contributions from Ca2+ and Cl fluxes. In 50% of experiments, Al began to inhibit the net H+ influx in Scott 66 roots at the same time that growth was affected. However, in more than 25% of cases, Al-induced inhibition of growth rate occurred before any sustained decrease in the current or H+ flux. Although showing a correlation between growth and current or H+ fluxes, these data do not suggest a mechanistic association between these processes. We conclude that the inhibition of root growth by Al is not caused by the reduction in current or H+ influx at the root apex.  相似文献   

5.
H+-ATPase activity of a plasma membrane-enriched fraction decreased after the treatment of barley (Hordeum vulgare) seedlings with Al for 5 days. A remarkably high level of Al was found in the membrane fraction of Al-treated roots. A long-term effect of Al was identified as the repression of the H+-ATPase of plasma membranes isolated from the roots of barley and wheat (Triticum aestivum) cultivars, Atlas 66 (Al-tolerant) and Scout 66 (Al-sensitive). To monitor short-term effects of Al, the electrical membrane potentials across plasma membranes of both wheat cultivars were compared indirectly by measuring the efflux of K+ for 40 min under various conditions. The rate of efflux of K+ in Scout was twice that in Atlas at low pH values such as 4.2. Vanadate, an inhibitor of the H+-ATPase of the plasma membrane, increased the efflux of K+. Al repressed this efflux at low pH, probably through an effect on K+ channels, and repression was more pronounced in Scout. Al strongly repressed the efflux of K+ irrespective of the presence of vanadate. Ca2+ also had a repressive effect on the efflux of K+ at low pH. The effect of Ca2+, greater in Scout, might be related to the regulation of the net influx of H+, since the effect was negated by vanadate. The results suggest that extracellular low pH may cause an increase in the influx of H+, which in turn is counteracted by the efflux of K+ and H+. These results suggest that the ability to maintain the integrity of the plasma membrane and the ability to recover the electrical balance at the plasma membrane through a net influx of H+ and the efflux of K+ seem to participate in the mechanism of tolerance to Al stress under acidic conditions.  相似文献   

6.
The influence of Al exposure on long-distance Ca2+ translocation from specific root zones (root apex or mature root) to the shoot was studied in intact seedlings of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars (Al-tolerant Atlas 66 and Al-sensitive Scout 66). Seedlings were grown in 100 [mu]M CaCl2 solution (pH 4.5) for 3 d. Subsequently, a divided chamber technique using 45Ca2+-labeled solutions (100 [mu]M CaCl2 with or without 5 or 20 [mu]M AlCl3, pH 4.5) was used to study Ca2+ translocation from either the terminal 5 to 10 mm of the root or a 10-mm region of intact root approximately 50 mm behind the root apex. The Al concentrations used, which were toxic to Scout 66, caused a significant inhibition of Ca2+ translocation from the apical region of Scout 66 roots. The same Al exposures had a much smaller effect on root apical Ca2+ translocation in Atlas 66. When a 10-mm region of the mature root was exposed to 45Ca2+, smaller genotypic differences in the Al effects effects on Ca2+ translocation were observed, because the degree of Al-induced inhibition of Ca2+ translocation was less than that at the root apex. Exposure of the root apex to Al inhibited root elongation by 70 to 99% in Scout 66 but had a lesser effect (less than 40% inhibition) in Atlas 66. When a mature root region was exposed to Al, root elongation was not significantly affected in either cultivar. These results demonstrate that genotypic differences in Al-induced inhibition of Ca2+ translocation and root growth are localized primarily in the root apex. The pattern of Ca2+ translocation within the intact root was mainly basipetal, with most of the absorbed Ca2+ translocated toward the shoot. A small amount of acropetal Ca2+ translocation from the mature root regions to the apex was also observed, which accounted for less than 5% of the total Ca2+ translocation within the entire root. Because Ca2+ translocation toward the root apex is limited, most of the Ca2+ needed for normal cellular function in the apex must be absorbed from the external solution. Thus, continuous Al disruption of Ca2+ absorption into cells of the root apex could alter Ca2+ nutrition and homeostasis in these cells and could play a pivotal role in the mechanisms of Al toxicity in Al-sensitive wheat cultivars.  相似文献   

7.
Three cultivars of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.), which are sensitive to aluminium (Al) in the order Primahill > Monohill > Regina, were grown in water culture for 2 weeks. Nutrients were supplied at 15% increase of amounts daily, corresponding to the nutrient demand for maximal growth. The 2.4-dinitrophenol (DNP)-sensitive (metabolic) and DNP-insensitive (non-metabolic) uptake of aluminium, phosphate. 45Ca2+ and K+(86Rb+) in roots were measured as well as transport to shoots of intact plants. All 3 cultivars absorbed more aluminium if DNP was present during the aluminium treatment than in its absence. It is suggested that sugar beets are able to extrude aluminium activity or that they possess an active mechanism to keep Al outside the cell. The presence of Al in the medium during the 1-h experiment affected the metabolic and non-metabolic fluxes of 45Ca2+ and K+(86Rb+) in different ways. In the presence of DNP, the influx of both 45Ca2+ and K+(86Rb+) and the efflux of 45Ca2+ were inhibited by Al in a competitive way. At inhibition of 45Ca2+ influx, 2 Al ions are probably bound per Ca2+ uptake site in cv. Regina (Al-tolerant), but in cvs Primahill and Monohill only one Al ion is bound (more Al sensitive). Aluminium competitively inhibited the active efflux of 45Ca2+ (absence of DNP) in almost the same way in the 3 cultivars. In contrast, aluminium stimulated the influx of K+(86Rb+) in cvs Primahill, Monohill and Regina in the absence of DNP. Thus, the Al effects on active and passive K+(86Rb+) influx are different. The total influx of K+(86Rb+) increased in the presence of Al and might be connected to an active exclusion of Al. Regina is the least Al-sensitive cultivar, probably because Al interferes less with the Ca2+ fluxes and because this cultivar actively excludes phosphate in the presence of Al. Thus Al-phosphate precipitation within the plant could be avoided.  相似文献   

8.
Control of rhizosphere pH and exclusion of Al by the plasma membrane have been hypothesized as possible mechanisms for Al tolerance. To test primarily the rhizosphere pH hypothesis, wheat cultivars (Triticum aestivum L. `Atlas 66' and `Scout'), which differ in Al tolerance, were grown in either complete nutrient solution, or 0.6 millimolar CaSO4, with and without Al at pH 4.50. A microelectrode system was used to simultaneously measure rhizosphere pH, K+, and H+ fluxes, and membrane potentials (Em) along the root at various distances from the root apex. In complete nutrient solution, the rhizosphere pH associated with mature root cells (measured 10-40 millimeters from the root apex) of Al-tolerant `Atlas 66' was slightly higher than that of the bulk solution, whereas roots of Al-sensitive `Scout' caused a very small decrease in the rhizosphere pH. In CaSO4 solution, no significant differences in rhizosphere pH were found between wheat cultivars, while differential Al tolerance was still observed, indicating that the rhizosphere pH associated with mature root tissue is not directly involved in the mechanism(s) of differential Al tolerance. In Al-tolerant `Atlas 66', growth in a CaSO4 solution with 5 micromolar Al (pH 4.50) had little effect on net K+ influx, H+ efflux, and root-cell membrane potential measured in cells of mature root tissue (from 10-40 mm back from apex). However, in Al-sensitive `Scout', Al treatment caused a dramatic inhibition of K+ influx and both a moderate reduction of H+ efflux and depolarization of the membrane potential. These results demonstrate that increased Al tolerance in wheat is associated with the increased ability of the tolerant plant to maintain normal ion fluxes and membrane potentials across the plasmalemma of root cells in the presence of Al.  相似文献   

9.
Inhibition of growth and development of root border cells in wheat by Al   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
The production and development of border cells vary with genotype, and they are released in wheat at an earlier stage of root development than other species studied so far. No significant difference was observed in the maximum number of border cells between Al-tolerant (Atlas 66) and Al-sensitive (Scout 66) cultivars in the absence of Al treatment. Al seriously inhibited the production and release of border cells, resulting in clumping of border cells in Scout 66, but less clustering in Atlas 66. The number of border cells released from roots treated with Al is significantly less than that from roots grown without Al treatment. Al treatment induced the death of detached border cells in vitro and they were killed by a 20-h treatment with 25 µ m Al. No significant difference in survival percentage of detached border cells was observed between Atlas 66 and Scout 66, regardless of the presence or absence of Al. The removal of border cells from root tips of both Atlas 66 and Scout 66 enhanced the Al-induced inhibition of root elongation concomitant with increased Al accumulation in the root. These results suggest that border cells adhered to the root tips play a potential role in the protection of root from Al injury in wheat.  相似文献   

10.
Zhang G  Taylor GJ 《Plant physiology》1989,91(3):1094-1099
Uptake of aluminum (Al) by excised roots of two Al-tolerant cultivars and two Al-sensitive cultivars of Triticum aestivum L. (wheat) was biphasic, with a rapid phase of uptake in the first 30 minutes followed by a linear phase of uptake up to 180 minutes. At the end of the uptake period, higher concentrations of Al were found in roots of the Al-sensitive cultivars (Neepawa and Scout-66) than in the Al-tolerant cultivars (Atlas-66 and PT-741), but differences were small. Experiments testing the effectiveness of several desorption agents demonstrated that citric acid was most effective in desorption of loosely bound Al (the putative apoplasmic compartment) followed by others in the order tartaric acid > EDTA > CaSO4 = ScCl3. In all cultivars, 30 minutes of desorption with citric acid depleted the rapidly exchanging, putative apoplasmic compartment, although some tightly bound Al remained in that compartment. The relationship between Al remaining after desorption and time in the uptake medium was nearly linear and no distinction was observed between Al-tolerant and Al-sensitive cultivars. However, uptake of Al by the Al-tolerant cultivars was increased by treatment with the protonophore 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP), while uptake of Al by Al-sensitive cultivars was relatively unaffected. Such results suggest the possible involvement of an active exclusion mechanism in Al-tolerant cultivars of T. aestivum.  相似文献   

11.
Accumulation of some proteins isolated from the cell wall of roots of the Al-sensitive (Alfor) and the Al-resistant (Bavaria) barley cultivars were followed during treatment with different Al3+ concentrations, pH changes of the root medium, and several heavy metals (Cu2+, Cd2+, Co2+). SDS-PAGE analysis revealed an Al-induced accumulation of polypeptides with molecular mass of 14, and 16 kDa and a group of polypeptides around 27 kDa. The accumulation pattern of Al-induced polypeptides was very similar in both cultivars but in the Al-resistant Bavaria it was induced at lower Al concentration and earlier than it was in the Al-sensitive cultivar Alfor. Changes in pH values of root medium (pH 3.5–6.5) did not show any effect on the accumulation of Al-induced cell wall polypeptides either in Al-sensitive or in Al-tolerant barley cultivar. Heavy metals (Cu, Cd, and Co) at concentration of 10 μM resulted in similar accumulation of individual polypeptides as we found after Al treatment. In comparison to Al, quantitative differences in polypeptides accumulation induced by Cu, Cd and Co were less expressed that of Al treatment. More pronounced accumulation and earlier induction of individual cell wall polypeptides in roots of Al-resistant barley cultivar than in Al-sensitive, might indicate some possible role of these polypeptides in plant resistance to Al stress.  相似文献   

12.
Lignin deposition induced by aluminum in wheat (Triticum aestivum) roots   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
We investigated the relation between the toxic effect of aluminum (Al) on root growth and the lignin deposition in wheat ( Triticum aestivum L. cvs Atlas 66 and Scout 66). In the Al-tolerant cultivar Atlas 66, control treatment without AlCl3 at pH 4.75, cell length increased dramatically in the portion of the root that was 0.6 to 3.2 mm from the root cap junction (approximately 1.0 to 3.6 mm from the root tip). However, treatment with 20 μ M AlCl3 for 24 and 48 h completely inhibited root elongation and markedly decreased the length and increased the diameter of the cells in the same portion of the root. Moreover, marked deposition of lignin was observed in the cells that corresponded to the portion 1.5 to 4.5 mm from the root tip in Atlas 66 roots treated with 20 μ M AlCl3, while no deposition of lignin was detected in control roots. Treatment with 5 μ M AlCl3 slightly inhibited root growth and there was no deposition of lignin in the root. On the other hand, in roots of the Al-sensitive cultivar Scout 66, treatment with 5 μ M AlCl3 completely inhibited root growth and markedly induced deposition of lignin. These results suggest that lignification in the elongating region coincided with the extent of inhibition of root growth by Al in two wheat cultivars that differed in their sensitivity to Al.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of aluminum (Al) on root elongation, the mechanical extensibility of the cell wall, and the amount of cell-wall polysaccharides in the roots of Al-resistant (Atlas 66) and Al-sensitive (Scout 66) cultivars of wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.) were examined. Exposure to 10 μ M AlCl3 for 6 h inhibited root elongation in Scout 66 but not in Atlas 66. It also decreased the mechanical extensibility of the cell wall in the roots of both cultivars, but prominently only in the roots of Scout 66. The amount of hemicellulose in the 10-mm region of root apex of Scout 66 was increased by the exposure to Al, especially in the apical regions. Al did not influence the neutral sugar composition of either pectin or hemicellulose in Scout 66 roots. However, Al increased the weight-average molecular mass of hemicellulosic polysaccharides and the amounts of wall-bound ferulic and diferulic acids in Scout 66 roots. These findings suggest that Al modifies the metabolism of cell-wall components and thus makes the cell wall thick and rigid, thereby inhibiting the growth of wheat roots.  相似文献   

14.
Aluminum (Al) partitioning in intact roots of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars that differ in sensitivity to Al was investigated. Roots of intact seedlings were exposed to Al for up to 24 hours and distribution of Al was assessed visually by hematoxylin staining or by direct measurement of concentration of Al by atomic absorption spectrophotometry or ion chromatography. Major differences in Al accumulation between Al-tolerant (Atlas 66) and Al-sensitive (Tam 105) cultivars were found in the growing regions 0 to 2 and 2 to 5 millimeters from the root apex. Al content was 9 to 13 times greater in the 0 to 2 millimeters root tips of cv Tam 105 than in the tips of cv Atlas 66 when exposed to 50 micromolar Al for 19 to 24 hours. The oxidative phosphorylation inhibitor carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone and the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide increased Al uptake by intact root tips of cv Atlas 66. Also, loss of Al from the roots of both cultivars was measured after the roots were “pulsed” with 50 micromolar Al for 2 hours and then placed in an Al-free nutrient solution for 6 hours. The 0 to 2 millimeter root tips of cv Tam 105 lost 30% of the absorbed Al, whereas the tips of cv Atlas 66 lost 60%. In light of these results, we conclude that the differential Al sensitivity in wheat correlates with the concentration of Al in the root meristems. The data support the hypothesis that part of the mechanism for Al tolerance in wheat is based on a metabolism-dependent exclusion of Al from the sensitive meristems.  相似文献   

15.
Addition of aluminium chloride (50 μM Al) caused different effects on the transmembrane electrical potential (PD) of root cells in Al-tolerant wheat (Triticum aestivum) cv. Kadett and Al-sensitive cv. WW 20299. As changes in PD of plant cells may depend on transient fluxes of protons, potassium and/or calcium through cell membranes, the effect of Al was investigated on the cytosolic concentrations of these ions in protoplasts isolated from root tips of the same cultivars. The tetra[acetoxymethyl] esters of the fluorescent dyes bis-carboxyethyl-carboxyfluorescein, BCECF, K+-binding benzofuran isophthalate, PBFI, and the stilbene chromophore Fura 2-AM were used to determine pH, K+ and Ca2+, respectively. Changes in fluorescence ratios, directly reflecting changes in [H+], [K+] and [Ca2+] in the cytosol, were determined by photometry fluorescence microscopy. Additions and removals of Al to and from both cultivars caused hyperpolarizations and depolarizations, respectively, but only in the sensitive cv. WW 20299 did the resting PD decrease gradually. Addition of Al to the protoplasts caused rapid changes in cytosolic pH, free [K+] and [Ca2+]. In both cultivars Al caused a transient oscillating increase in cytosolic [Ca2+] for 1 or 2 min and a rapid pH-dependent change in cytosolic [K+]. At pH 5 the presence of K+ in the medium diminished the Al-induced decrease in cytosolic [K+]. Aluminium (50 μM) induced a transient increase in cytosolic [H+] (pH decreased) in both cultivars, but the cytosolic pH returned to its initial value only in the Al-tolerant cv. Kadett. In the Alsensitive cv. WW 20299, repeated additions of Al caused a gradual decline in pH. Moreover, in the presence of 1 mM KCl, pH recovered completely in both cultivars. Since only the effect on pH differed in the two cultivars, the more toxic effect of Al on the cv. WW 20299 should be related to the change in pH.  相似文献   

16.
The present study was conducted to investigate the effects of enhanced Ca supply on Al toxicity in relation to cell wall properties in two wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars differing in Al resistance. Seedlings of Al-tolerant Inia66 and Al-sensitive Kalyansona cultivars were grown in complete nutrient solutions for 4 days then subjected to treatment solutions containing Al (0, 50 μM) and Ca (500, 2500 μM) at pH 4.5 for 24 h. Root elongation was affected greatly by Al treatment in the Al-sensitive cultivar and a significant improvement in root growth was observed with enhanced Ca supply during Al stress. Pectin and hemicellulose contents in the root cell walls increased with Al stress, and this increase was more conspicuous in the Al-sensitive cultivar. The molecular mass of hemicellulosic polysaccharides increased with Al treatment in the Al-sensitive cultivar and decreased with enhanced Ca supply. The increase in the molecular mass of hemicellulosic polysaccharides was attributed to increased content of glucose, arabinose and xylose in neutral sugars. Enhanced Ca supply slightly decreased the content of these components with Al stress. Aluminum treatment increased the contents of ferulic and p-coumaric acid, especially in the Al-sensitive cultivar, by increasing peroxidase (POD, EC 1.11.1.7) and phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PAL, EC 4.3.1.5) activity, whereas enhanced Ca supply during Al stress decreased the content of these components by decreasing POD and PAL activity. These results suggest that the increased molecular mass of hemicellulosic polysaccharides and phenolic compounds in the Al-sensitive cultivar with Al stress might have inhibited root elongation associated with cell wall stiffening related to cross-linking among cell-wall polymers and lignin. Enhanced Ca supply might maintain the normal synthesis of these materials even with Al stress.  相似文献   

17.
Rengel Z 《Plant physiology》1990,93(3):1261-1267
Rhizotoxicity of Al is more pronounced in younger plants. Effects of Al on nutrient uptake by plants of different age are poorly understood. The depletion technique was used to monitor net Mg2+ uptake from nutrient solutions by intact 15- and 35-day-old plants of two ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum Lam.) cultivars. Lowering the pH from 6.0 to 4.2 decreased the maximum net ion influx without affecting Km. Aluminum at 6.6 micromolar Al3+ activity increased Km indicating competitive inhibition. The effects of pH and 6.6 micromolar Al3+ on net Mg2+ uptake were much larger in 15- than in 35-day-old plants. Aluminum at 26 micromolar Al3+ activity competitively inhibited net Mg2+ uptake by 35-day-old plants, while causing time- and external Mg2+ activity-dependent net Mg2+ efflux from 15-day-old plants. The equilibrium constant (Ki) of a reversible combination of postulated plasmalemma Mg2+ transporter and Al3+ was calculated to be 2 and 5 micromolar Al3+ activity for 15-day-old plants of Wilo and Gulf ryegrass, respectively, and 21 micromolar Al3+ activity for 35-day-old plants of both cultivars. The Al3+-mediated increase in Km was larger for 15-day-old plants of the Al-sensitive cultivar `Wilo' than of the more Al-tolerant cultivar `Gulf,' while Al3+ affected 35-day-old plants of both cultivars to the same extent.  相似文献   

18.
The relationship between Al-induced depolarization of root-cell transmembrane electrical potentials (Em) and Al tolerance in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) was investigated. Al exposure induced depolarizations of Em in the Al-tolerant wheat cultivars Atlas and ET3, but not in the Al-sensitive wheat cultivars Scout and ES3. The depolarizations of Em occured in root cap cells and as far back as 10 mm from the root tip. The depolarization was specific to Al3+; no depolarization was observed when roots were exposed to the rhizotoxic trivalent cation La3+. The Al-induced depolarization occurred in the presence of anion-channel antagonists that blocked the release of malate, indicating that the depolarization is not due to the electrogenic efflux of malate2-. K+-induced depolarizations in the root cap were of the same magnitude as Al-induced depolarizations, but did not trigger malate release, indicating that Al-induced depolarization of root cap cell membrane potentials is probably linked to, but is not sufficient to trigger, malate release.  相似文献   

19.
To further elucidate the mechanisms of differential genotypic tolerance to Al, plasma membrane (PM) vesicles were isolated from whole roots, root tips, and tipless roots of Al3+-sensitive and Al3+-tolerant cultivars (cv) of wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv Scout 66 and cv Atlas 66, respectively). Vesicles from cv Scout root tips sorbed more Al than vesicles prepared from any other source. The intrinsic surface-charge density of vesicles isolated from cv Scout was 26% more negative than vesicles from cv Atlas (-37.2 versus -29.5 millicoulombs m-2). Growth experiments indicated that cv Scout is slightly more sensitive to La3+ than is cv Atlas, that the cultivars are equally sensitive to H+, and that cv Atlas is slightly more sensitive to SeO42-. The difference in sensitivity to Al3+ was very large; for a 50% inhibition, a 16-fold greater activity of Al3+ was required for cv Atlas. Using a newly developed Gouy-Chapman-Stern model for ion sorption to the PM together with growth-response curves, we estimate that the difference in surface-charge density can account for the slightly greater sensitivity of cv Scout to cationic toxicants and the slightly greater sensitivity of cv Atlas to anionic toxicants. According to our estimates the differences in PM surface negativity and Al sorptive capacity probably account for some of the difference in sensitivity to Al3+, but the greater part of the difference probably arises from other tolerance mechanisms expressed in cv Atlas root tips that reduce the amount of Al3+ that can reach the PM.  相似文献   

20.
A rapid hydroponic screening for aluminium tolerance in barley   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Selection and breeding of crops for aluminium (Al) tolerance is a useful approach to increase production on acid soils. This requires a rapid and reliable system to discriminate between Al-tolerant and Al-sensitive genotypes. A hydroponic system was developed to screen for Al tolerance in barley (t Hordeum vulgare L.) to overcome several problems encountered in previous screening methods. Four levels of Al (5, 10, 20, and 40 t M) in 1 mt M CaCl2 solution at pH 4.5 were used to rank lines for Al-tolerance. Each line was cultured in a different compartment to eliminate chemical and pH interactions among lines. To avoid changes in Al tolerance due to other factors such as the calcium (Ca) concentration of the solution, Al-tolerant (Atlas 66) and Al-sensitive (Scout 66) cultivars of wheat (t Triticum aestivum L.) were used as reference cultivars. Five ranks of Al tolerance from highly tolerant to highly sensitive were established by comparison with each reference. Eriochrome cyanine R staining was used for the rapid evaluation of Al tolerance. This screening system allowed classification of about 50 barley lines into five different Al tolerance groups within one week. Using this system, screening of ca. 600 barley lines from various regions of the world was conducted. Most lines were sensitive to Al, but ninety lines showed intermediate Al-tolerance. Thirty nine lines were highly sensitive to Al in solution.  相似文献   

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