Induction of a barrier to radial oxygen loss in roots of rice by low concentrations of monocarboxylic acids

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Standard

Induction of a barrier to radial oxygen loss in roots of rice by low concentrations of monocarboxylic acids. / Colmer, Timothy; Kotula, Lukasz; Malik, Al Imran; Takahashi, Hirokazu; Konnerup, Dennis; Nakazono, Mikio; Pedersen, Ole.

2019. 20 Abstract from 2019 ISPA Conference, Taipei, Taiwan, Province of China.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Colmer, T, Kotula, L, Malik, AI, Takahashi, H, Konnerup, D, Nakazono, M & Pedersen, O 2019, 'Induction of a barrier to radial oxygen loss in roots of rice by low concentrations of monocarboxylic acids', 2019 ISPA Conference, Taipei, Taiwan, Province of China, 02/06/2019 - 05/06/2019 pp. 20.

APA

Colmer, T., Kotula, L., Malik, A. I., Takahashi, H., Konnerup, D., Nakazono, M., & Pedersen, O. (2019). Induction of a barrier to radial oxygen loss in roots of rice by low concentrations of monocarboxylic acids. 20. Abstract from 2019 ISPA Conference, Taipei, Taiwan, Province of China.

Vancouver

Colmer T, Kotula L, Malik AI, Takahashi H, Konnerup D, Nakazono M et al. Induction of a barrier to radial oxygen loss in roots of rice by low concentrations of monocarboxylic acids. 2019. Abstract from 2019 ISPA Conference, Taipei, Taiwan, Province of China.

Author

Colmer, Timothy ; Kotula, Lukasz ; Malik, Al Imran ; Takahashi, Hirokazu ; Konnerup, Dennis ; Nakazono, Mikio ; Pedersen, Ole. / Induction of a barrier to radial oxygen loss in roots of rice by low concentrations of monocarboxylic acids. Abstract from 2019 ISPA Conference, Taipei, Taiwan, Province of China.1 p.

Bibtex

@conference{4b6cb58fa02f4ae5a17e7311345868aa,
title = "Induction of a barrier to radial oxygen loss in roots of rice by low concentrations of monocarboxylic acids",
abstract = "Waterlogged soils are typically anoxic, whereas roots require oxygen. Roots of most wetland plants contain aerenchyma and many species also possess a barrier to radial oxygen loss (ROL). Restriction of ROL from the basal zones promotes oxygen movement along roots to the tips. In addition to being anaerobic, {\textquoteleft}phytotoxins{\textquoteright} such as Fe2+, sulphides and monocarboxylic acids can accumulate to toxic levels in waterlogged soils. These phytotoxins can invoke marked changes in root anatomy, radial permeability and growth. We tested the hypothesis that low, non-toxic, concentrations of monocarboxylic acids can induce root ROL barrier formation in rice (Oryza sativa). Acetic, propionic, butyric and hexanoic acids, individually at 0.038-0.048 mM (undissociated component), each triggered root ROL barrier development. Root extension was unaffected by acetic or butyric acids, but mildly inhibited (at most 10%) by propionic or hexanoic acids, at these concentrations. Root respiration of expanded tissues was not, or in some cases moderately, inhibited by short-term exposures to these concentrations of monocarboxylic acids, whereas respiration declined exponentially as the dose was increased. Thus, low concentrations (0.038-0.048 mM) of four monocarboxylic acids can induce root ROL barrier formation in rice, a response apparently independent from phytotoxic effects on root extension.",
author = "Timothy Colmer and Lukasz Kotula and Malik, {Al Imran} and Hirokazu Takahashi and Dennis Konnerup and Mikio Nakazono and Ole Pedersen",
year = "2019",
language = "English",
pages = "20",
note = "2019 ISPA Conference ; Conference date: 02-06-2019 Through 05-06-2019",
url = "http://2019ispa.org",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Induction of a barrier to radial oxygen loss in roots of rice by low concentrations of monocarboxylic acids

AU - Colmer, Timothy

AU - Kotula, Lukasz

AU - Malik, Al Imran

AU - Takahashi, Hirokazu

AU - Konnerup, Dennis

AU - Nakazono, Mikio

AU - Pedersen, Ole

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Waterlogged soils are typically anoxic, whereas roots require oxygen. Roots of most wetland plants contain aerenchyma and many species also possess a barrier to radial oxygen loss (ROL). Restriction of ROL from the basal zones promotes oxygen movement along roots to the tips. In addition to being anaerobic, ‘phytotoxins’ such as Fe2+, sulphides and monocarboxylic acids can accumulate to toxic levels in waterlogged soils. These phytotoxins can invoke marked changes in root anatomy, radial permeability and growth. We tested the hypothesis that low, non-toxic, concentrations of monocarboxylic acids can induce root ROL barrier formation in rice (Oryza sativa). Acetic, propionic, butyric and hexanoic acids, individually at 0.038-0.048 mM (undissociated component), each triggered root ROL barrier development. Root extension was unaffected by acetic or butyric acids, but mildly inhibited (at most 10%) by propionic or hexanoic acids, at these concentrations. Root respiration of expanded tissues was not, or in some cases moderately, inhibited by short-term exposures to these concentrations of monocarboxylic acids, whereas respiration declined exponentially as the dose was increased. Thus, low concentrations (0.038-0.048 mM) of four monocarboxylic acids can induce root ROL barrier formation in rice, a response apparently independent from phytotoxic effects on root extension.

AB - Waterlogged soils are typically anoxic, whereas roots require oxygen. Roots of most wetland plants contain aerenchyma and many species also possess a barrier to radial oxygen loss (ROL). Restriction of ROL from the basal zones promotes oxygen movement along roots to the tips. In addition to being anaerobic, ‘phytotoxins’ such as Fe2+, sulphides and monocarboxylic acids can accumulate to toxic levels in waterlogged soils. These phytotoxins can invoke marked changes in root anatomy, radial permeability and growth. We tested the hypothesis that low, non-toxic, concentrations of monocarboxylic acids can induce root ROL barrier formation in rice (Oryza sativa). Acetic, propionic, butyric and hexanoic acids, individually at 0.038-0.048 mM (undissociated component), each triggered root ROL barrier development. Root extension was unaffected by acetic or butyric acids, but mildly inhibited (at most 10%) by propionic or hexanoic acids, at these concentrations. Root respiration of expanded tissues was not, or in some cases moderately, inhibited by short-term exposures to these concentrations of monocarboxylic acids, whereas respiration declined exponentially as the dose was increased. Thus, low concentrations (0.038-0.048 mM) of four monocarboxylic acids can induce root ROL barrier formation in rice, a response apparently independent from phytotoxic effects on root extension.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

SP - 20

T2 - 2019 ISPA Conference

Y2 - 2 June 2019 through 5 June 2019

ER -

ID: 210977450