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      Organic acid excretion from roots: a plant mechanism for enhancing phosphorus acquisition, enhancing aluminum tolerance, and recruiting beneficial rhizobacteria

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          Root Architecture and Plant Productivity.

          J. Lynch (1995)
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            Plant nutrient-acquisition strategies change with soil age.

            Nitrogen (N) tends to limit plant productivity on young soils; phosphorus (P) becomes increasingly limiting in ancient soils because it gradually disappears through leaching and erosion. Plant traits that are regarded as adaptations to N- and P-limited conditions include mycorrhizas and cluster roots. Mycorrhizas 'scavenge' P from solution or 'mine' insoluble organic N. Cluster roots function in severely P-impoverished landscapes, 'mining' P fixed as insoluble inorganic phosphates. The 'scavenging' and 'mining' strategies of mycorrhizal species without and non-mycorrhizal species with cluster roots, respectively, allow functioning on soils that differ markedly in P availability. Based on recent advances in our understanding of these contrasting strategies of nutrient acquisition, we provide an explanation for the distribution of mycorrhizal species on less P-impoverished soils, and for why, globally, cluster-bearing species dominate on severely P-impoverished, ancient soils, where P sensitivity is relatively common.
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              A gene in the multidrug and toxic compound extrusion (MATE) family confers aluminum tolerance in sorghum.

              Crop yields are significantly reduced by aluminum toxicity on highly acidic soils, which comprise up to 50% of the world's arable land. Candidate aluminum tolerance proteins include organic acid efflux transporters, with the organic acids forming non-toxic complexes with rhizosphere aluminum. In this study, we used positional cloning to identify the gene encoding a member of the multidrug and toxic compound extrusion (MATE) family, an aluminum-activated citrate transporter, as responsible for the major sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) aluminum tolerance locus, Alt(SB). Polymorphisms in regulatory regions of Alt(SB) are likely to contribute to large allelic effects, acting to increase Alt(SB) expression in the root apex of tolerant genotypes. Furthermore, aluminum-inducible Alt(SB) expression is associated with induction of aluminum tolerance via enhanced root citrate exudation. These findings will allow us to identify superior Alt(SB) haplotypes that can be incorporated via molecular breeding and biotechnology into acid soil breeding programs, thus helping to increase crop yields in developing countries where acidic soils predominate.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Soil Science and Plant Nutrition
                Soil Science and Plant Nutrition
                Informa UK Limited
                0038-0768
                1747-0765
                November 02 2018
                October 27 2018
                November 02 2018
                : 64
                : 6
                : 697-704
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Applied Biological Sciences, Gifu University, Gifu, Japan
                [2 ] Graduate School of Biosphere Science, Hiroshima University, Higashi-Hiroshima, Japan
                Article
                10.1080/00380768.2018.1537093
                3d3e5a17-c9f6-41a2-befc-83c4936bad09
                © 2018
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