The effect of phytase on the availability of P from myo-inositol hexaphosphate (phytate) for maize roots |
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Authors: | Günter R. Findenegg Jaap A. Nelemans |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition, Agricultural University Wageningen, P.O. Box 8005, 6700 EC Wageningen, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | The effect of adding phytase to the root medium of maize plants on the P-availability of added myo-inositol hexaphosphate (phytin) has been studied in pot experiments. When 40 mM phytin-P in nutrient solution was incubated in quartz-sand for 15 days in the absence of plants, 80% of it could be recovered from the solution as soluble organic P. Maize plants growing on this mixture assimilated P from phytin at rates comparable to those from inorganic phosphate (Pi). At a lower addition rate (2 mM phytin-P) only 10% was recovered in the soil solution, and plant growth was severely limited by P. At this low phytin level, the addition of phytase (10 enzyme units per kg sand) increased the plants' dry weight yield by 32%. The relative increases of the Pi concentration in the solution and of the amount of P in the plants were even higher, indicating that the observed growth stimulation was due to an increased rate of phytin hydrolysis. The enzyme-induced growth stimulation was also observed with plants growing in pots filled with soil low in P, when phytin was added. However, on three different soils the addition rates of phytin and phytase necessary for obtaining a significant phytase effect were both about 10 times higher than those required in quartzsand. It is concluded that the P-availability from organic sources can be limited by the rate of their hydrolytic cleavage.Abbreviation Pi inorganic phosphate |
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Keywords: | bioavailability maize myo-inositol phosphorus phytase phytin soil |
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