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Effect of phosphorus supply on root traits of two Brassica oleracea L. genotypes

Authors :
Hiram Castillo-Michel
Paula Pongrac
Gladys Wright
Philip J. White
Sina Fischer
Mitja Kelemen
Juan Reyes-Herrera
Jacqueline Thompson
Matevž Likar
Martin R. Broadley
Primož Vavpetič
Robert D. Hancock
Primož Pelicon
Source :
'BMC Plant Biology ', vol: 20, pages: 368-1-368-17 (2020), BMC Plant Biology, BMC Plant Biology, Vol 20, Iss 1, Pp 1-17 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background Phosphorus (P) deficiency limits crop production worldwide. Crops differ in their ability to acquire and utilise the P available. The aim of this study was to determine root traits (root exudates, root system architecture (RSA), tissue-specific allocation of P, and gene expression in roots) that (a) play a role in P-use efficiency and (b) contribute to large shoot zinc (Zn) concentration in Brassica oleracea. Results Two B. oleracea accessions (var. sabellica C6, a kale, and var. italica F103, a broccoli) were grown in a hydroponic system or in a high-throughput-root phenotyping (HTRP) system where they received Low P (0.025 mM) or High P (0.25 mM) supply for 2 weeks. In hydroponics, root and shoot P and Zn concentrations were measured, root exudates were profiled using both Fourier-Transform-Infrared spectroscopy and gas-chromatography-mass spectrometry and previously published RNAseq data from roots was re-examined. In HTRP experiments, RSA (main and lateral root number and lateral root length) was assessed and the tissue-specific distribution of P was determined using micro-particle-induced-X-ray emission. The C6 accession had greater root and shoot biomass than the F103 accession, but the latter had a larger shoot P concentration than the C6 accession, regardless of the P supply in the hydroponic system. The F103 accession had a larger shoot Zn concentration than the C6 accession in the High P treatment. Although the F103 accession had a larger number of lateral roots, which were also longer than in the C6 accession, the C6 accession released a larger quantity and number of polar compounds than the F103 accession. A larger number of P-responsive genes were found in the Low P treatment in roots of the F103 accession than in roots of the C6 accession. Expression of genes linked with “phosphate starvation” was up-regulated, while those linked with iron homeostasis were down-regulated in the Low P treatment. Conclusions The results illustrate large within-species variability in root acclimatory responses to P supply in the composition of root exudates, RSA and gene expression, but not in P distribution in root cross sections, enabling P sufficiency in the two B. oleracea accessions studied.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712229
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Plant Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9fcf82a88428765a6de2216e3e207d2e