Authors
Peter M Kopittke, Katie L Moore, Enzo Lombi, Alessandra Gianoncelli, Brett J Ferguson, F Pax C Blamey, Neal W Menzies, Timothy M Nicholson, Brigid A McKenna, Peng Wang, Peter M Gresshoff, George Kourousias, Richard I Webb, Kathryn Green, Alina Tollenaere
Publication date
2015/4/1
Journal
Plant Physiology
Volume
167
Issue
4
Pages
1402-1411
Publisher
American Society of Plant Biologists
Description
Despite the rhizotoxicity of aluminum (Al) being identified over 100 years ago, there is still no consensus regarding the mechanisms whereby root elongation rate is initially reduced in the approximately 40% of arable soils worldwide that are acidic. We used high-resolution kinematic analyses, molecular biology, rheology, and advanced imaging techniques to examine soybean (Glycine max) roots exposed to Al. Using this multidisciplinary approach, we have conclusively shown that the primary lesion of Al is apoplastic. In particular, it was found that 75 µm  Al reduced root growth after only 5 min (or 30 min at 30 µm  Al), with Al being toxic by binding to the walls of outer cells, which directly inhibited their loosening in the elongation zone. An alteration in the biosynthesis and distribution of ethylene and auxin was a second, slower effect, causing both a transient decrease in the rate of cell elongation after 1.5 h but …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
PM Kopittke, KL Moore, E Lombi, A Gianoncelli… - Plant Physiology, 2015