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Molybdenum-induced effects on leaf ultra-structure and rhizosphere phosphorus transformation in Triticum aestivum L.

Authors :
Rana, Muhammad Shoaib
Sun, Xuecheng
Imran, Muhammad
Ali, Shafaqat
Shaaban, Muhammad
Moussa, Mohamed G.
Khan, Zaid
Afzal, Javaria
Binyamin, Rana
Bhantana, Parashuram
Alam, Mufid
Din, Intisar Ud
Younas, Muhammad
Hu, Chengxiao
Source :
Plant Physiology & Biochemistry. Aug2020, Vol. 153, p20-29. 10p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Soil phosphorus (P) occurs in pools of lower availability due to soil P fixation and therefore, it is a key constrain to crop production. Long term molybdenum-induced effects in wheat and rhizosphere/non-rhizosphere soil P dynamics have not yet been investigated. Here, a long term field experiment was conducted to explore these effects in wheat consisting of two treatments i.e. with molybdenum (+Mo) and without molybdenum (-Mo). The results revealed that molybdenum (Mo) supply increased plant biomass, grain yield, P uptake, preserved the configuration of chloroplast, stomata, and mesophyll tissue cells, suggesting the complementary effects of Mo on wheat yield and P accumulation. During the periods of vegetative growth, soil organic carbon, organic matter, and microbial biomass P were higher and tended to decrease in rhizosphere soil at maturity stage. In +Mo treatment, the most available P fractions [H 2 O-Pi (16.2–22.9 mg/kg and 4.24–7.57 mg/kg) and NaHCO 3 -Pi (130–149 mg/kg and 77.2–88 mg/kg)] were significantly increased in rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere soils, respectively. In addition, the +Mo treatment significantly increased the acid phosphatase activity and the expression of phoN/phoC, aphA, olpA/lppC gene transcripts in rhizosphere soil compared to -Mo. Our research findings suggested that Mo application has increased P availability not only through biochemical and chemical changes in rhizosphere but also through P assimilation and induced effects in the leaf ultra-structures. So, it might be a strategy of long term Mo fertilizer supply to overcome the P scarcity in plants and rhizosphere soil. • Mo supply preserved the leaf ultrastructure through improved P assimilation. • The activity of P enzyme increased in rhizosphere soil in response to Mo application. • Mo application increased the soil P availability through biochemical changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09819428
Volume :
153
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Plant Physiology & Biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
143702554
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plaphy.2020.05.010