4.7 Article

Characteristics of a root hair-less line of Arabidopsis thaliana under physiological stresses

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 65, Issue 6, Pages 1497-1512

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/eru014

Keywords

Mineral nutrients; phosphate; root anchoring; root hair; stress tolerance; water absorption

Categories

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [23248017, 24114706, 25650093]
  2. Salt Science Foundation [1223]
  3. Steel Foundation for Environmental Protection Technology [2010-29]
  4. JST A-Step [AS242Z02907N]
  5. grant Program for Leading Graduate Schools from the JSPS
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [14J02201, 26113506, 26252011, 26650096, 23248017, 24114706, 25650093] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Root hairs of Arabidopsis play significant roles in the absorption of water and several minerals, secretion of acid phosphatases and organic acids, and anchoring of roots.The plasma membrane-associated Ca-2-binding protein-2 of Arabidopsis thaliana is involved in the growth of root hair tips. Several transgenic lines that overexpress the 23 residue N-terminal domain of this protein under the control of the root hair-specific EXPANSIN A7 promoter lack root hairs completely. The role of root hairs under normal and stress conditions was examined in one of these root hair-less lines (NR23). Compared with the wild type, NR23 showed a 47% reduction in water absorption, decreased drought tolerance, and a lower ability to adapt to heat. Growth of NR23 was suppressed in media deficient in phosphorus, iron, calcium, zinc, copper, or potassium. Also, the content of an individual mineral in NR23 grown in normal medium, or in medium lacking a specific mineral, was relatively low. In wild-type plants, the primary and lateral roots produce numerous root hairs that become elongated under phosphate-deficient conditions; NR23 did not produce root hairs. Although several isoforms of the plasma membrane phosphate transporters including PHT1;1PHT1;6 were markedly induced after growth in phosphate-deficient medium, the levels induced in NR23 were less than half those observed in the wild type. In phosphate-deficient medium, the amounts of acid phosphatase, malate, and citrate secreted from NR23 roots were 38, 9, and 16% of the levels secreted from wild-type roots. The present results suggest that root hairs play significant roles in the absorption of water and several minerals, secretion of acid phosphatase(s) and organic acids, and in penetration of the primary roots into gels.

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