首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Root exudation (net efflux of amino acids) may increase rhizodeposition under elevated CO2
Authors:DONALD A PHILLIPS  TAMA C FOX  JOHAN SIX
Institution:Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA
Abstract:Increases in atmospheric CO2 concentration (CO2]) can lead to global climate change and theoretically could enhance carbon (C) deposition in soil, but data on this complex issue are contradictory. One approach for clarifying the diverse forces influencing plant‐derived C in the rhizosphere involves defining how elevated CO2] alters the fundamental process of C transfer from plant roots to the soil. We examine here how a step increase in CO2] affects the innate influx and efflux components of root exudation in axenic plants, as one foundation for understanding how climate change may affect rhizodeposition. Increasing CO2] from 425 to 850 μmol mol?1 during short‐term trials enhanced shoot and root dry weight (P<0.01) of annual rye grass (Lolium multiflorum Lam.) and medic (Medicago truncatula L.) but had no effect on growth of maize (Zea mays L.). Root amino‐acid flux in the same plants changed only in maize, which increased the efflux rate (nmol g root fresh weight?1 h?1) of six amino acids (arginine, alanine, proline, tyrosine, lysine and leucine) significantly (P<0.05) under elevated CO2]. None of the three plant species altered the steady‐state concentration of 16 amino acids released into a hydroponic solution with changing CO2], apparently because amino‐acid influx rates, measured at 2.5 μm , consistently exceeded efflux rates. Indeed, plants recovered amino acids at rates 94–374% higher than they were lost from roots regardless of CO2]. These results indicate that, in theory, any effect of CO2] doubling on amino‐acid efflux can be offset by innately higher rates of influx. In practice, however, higher rates of amino‐acid cycling (i.e., efflux+influx) for each root segment (in C4 maize) or from more root tissue (in the two C3 species) should increase root exudation by plants exposed to elevated CO2] as additional amino acids would be adsorbed to soil particles or be taken up by soil microorganisms.
Keywords:amino-acid efflux  amino-acid uptake  C3 plants  C4 plants  elevated CO2
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号