| Literature DB >> 30297682 |
Md Atikur Rahman1, Sang-Hoon Lee2, Hee Chung Ji3, Ahmad Humayan Kabir4, Chris Stephen Jones5, Ki-Won Lee6.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: acidic soil; alleviation; aluminum; mineral nutrient; plant; toxicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30297682 PMCID: PMC6213855 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19103073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Concentration of Al (g·kg−1) in soil in different countries.
| Country | Area/Region/Location | Nature/Type of Soil | Soil Depth (cm) | Range of pH | No. of Samples | Range of Al Concentration (g/kg) | Mean | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bangladesh | Dinajpur, Rangpur, Bangladesh | Paddy soil; sandy loam, non-calcareous, acidic-alluvial | 0–15, 15–30 | 4.8–5.4 | 04 | 0.024–0.059 | 0.043 | [ |
| Hill of Chittagong University, Bangladesh | Hill topsoil; surface, subsurface | 0–12 | 4.4–5.5 | 45 | 0.036–0.058 | 0.048 | [ | |
| Brazil | Cantareira State Park, Brazil | Forest back-ground | 0–20, 20–40 | 3.3–5.7 | 11 | 17.1–71.8 | 41.1 | [ |
| China | Guizhou province, China | Yellow-brown | 0–30 | 3.5–4.8 | 13 | 65.2–128.5 | 106.4 | [ |
| Sichuan, Zhejiang, and Jiangsu, Southeast China | Original, bulk and rhizosphere soil | 0–20 | 3.4–5.9 | 18 | 0.18–0.58 | 0.37 | [ | |
| Central and Southwest China | Yellow sandstone, red earth, and Pleistocene deposits | 0–20 | 3.5–5.7 | 12 | 75.5–108.3 | 89.2 | [ | |
| Canada | Northwestern Alberta, eastern and western Canada | Podzolic, luvisoli, gleysolic, subsoil | -- -- | 3.5–5.4 | 35 | 0.015–0.027 | 0.069 | [ |
| Czech Republic | Jizera Mountains area, Czech Republic | Horizon; Organic-fragmented organic-humified organic-mineral mineral | 0–12.2 | 3.8–4.2 | 491 | 0.0057–0.017 | 0.0097 | [ |
| France | Vosges Mountains area, North Eastern France | Acid brown, podzolic | 0–220 | 3.7–4.6 | 8 | 0.0003–0.047 | 0.0173 | [ |
| India | Bihar, India | Fine mixed, fine loamy, sandy mixed | 0–150 | 4.4–7.0 | 13 | 0.0003–0.0051 | 0.0023 | [ |
| Ireland Republic | South-eastern region, Ireland | Grassland, tillage, forest, peat | 0–10 | 5.3–5.9 | 295 | 0.0–89.1 | 45.6 | [ |
| Japan | Hokkaido, Tohoku, Kanto, Kinki, Hokuriku-Chubu, Chugoku, Shikoku, Kyushu, and Okinawa | Agricultural soil; paddy/upland field | 0–15 | -- -- | 180 | 33.0–117.0 | 79.0 | [ |
| Korea Republic | Osan, Korea | Sandy clay loam | -- -- | 4.0–7.1 | -- -- | 0.384–1.825 | 0.836 | [ |
| Seoul, Ulsan, Hongchon, Korea | Forest; urban and industrial areas | 0–15 | 4.1–4.3 | -- -- | -- -- | -- -- | [ | |
| New Zealand | North Canterbury, Central Canterbury, Central Otago | Stony brown, brown, dense brown hill soil | 0–15 | 4.9–6.7 | 14 | 0.0005–0.0174 | 0.0057 | [ |
| USA | Palouse Conservation Field Station (PCFS) located near Pullman, WA, USA | Agricultural soils; silt loam | 0–30 | 4.7–6.3 | 80 | 0.034–0.055 | 0.0196 | [ |
| Crawford County, OH, USA | Subsoil, acid soil | 0–110 | 4.5–7.5 | 99 | 0–0.25 | -- -- | [ |
Impacts of aluminum toxicity in plants.
| Index of Toxicity | Sensitivity/Time of Al Exposure | Impacts of Al Toxicity | Conditions of Experiment | Aim of Assessment | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grain yield | Low/LD | Al-induced delay flowering; significantly reduced grain yield in sensitive cultivar | NS | FS | [ |
| Biomass production | Moderate/LD | Reduced dry matter yield | NS | FS | [ |
| Nutrient imbalance | Moderate/SD | Resulted imbalance of macronutrients including Mg, K and P | NS | TS | [ |
| Survival | Low/LD | Resulted dry weight is the most sensitive tolerance index while survival is considered as the most cost-effective indicator of tolerance | SC | TS | [ |
| Root growth | High/SD | Root growth was significantly inhibited by toxic Al ions in acid soil | SC | TS | [ |
| Change of root system | High/LD | Indicated potential toxicity problem; root tips and lateral roots become more stubby, turned brown, and inhibited fine brunching | SC | TA | [ |
| Rapture/cracks of root | High/SD | Induced rhizodermal cracks on roots after exposures to Al (11 µM) | NS | TA | [ |
| Plasma membrane (PM) | High/SD | Al3+ ion attached to PM; cells become more leaky and rigid | NS | TS | [ |
| Cell division and elongation | High/SD | Al resulted the disordered the arrangement of the cells, deformed cell shapes, altered cell structure, and the shorter of the meristematic zone of the root tips | NS | FS, AR | [ |
| Interference with enzymes | Moderate/SD | Down regulated peroxidase and chitinase isoforms in root tips | NS | FS, TS | [ |
| Organic acid exudation | Low/LD | Organic acids (oxalate, citrate) enhanced plant growth and adaptation following Al stress to acid soil | SC | FS, AR | [ |
| Callose formation | High/SD | Resulted a link between callose formation and Al-induced inhibition of root growth | NS | TA, TS | [ |
| Auxin transport | High/SD | Al toxicity inhibited ( | NS | FS, AR | [ |
| Al content in pectin | High/SD | Aggravated Al3+ toxicity due to accumulation of more Al in pectin | NS | TA | [ |
Plant-based indices for assessment of the impacts of Al-toxicity (LD, long-duration; SD, short-duration; FS, fundamental study; AR, applied research; TA, toxicity assessment; TS, tolerance screening; NS, nutrient solution; SC, soil condition).
Sensitivity of plants to aluminum toxicity, modified from [3,25,60,82,88,89,90,91,92].
| Sensitivity Threshold | ||
|---|---|---|
| High Sensitive (Indicator Plants) | Moderate Sensitive | Low Sensitive (Resistant/Tolerant Plants) |
Figure 1General overview of the factors affecting soil acidification, subsequent Al toxicity, and impacts in plants. (a) Natural and anthropogenic sources for occurring soil acidification. (b) Impact of cation saturation ratio in soil that led to increased exchangeable Al3+, and reduce acquisition of mineral nutrients. (c) Consequence of Al toxicity in roots, and thereby (d) impact of Al toxicity in shoots.
Calcareous amendments-induced alleviation of Al toxicity in plants to acid soils.
| Amendments | Plant Species | Dose (t·ha−1) and Duration | Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phosphogypsum (PG) | 12.0, (0–8.0 cm), 180 days | Increased Ca concentrations in all crops; enhanced root growth; provided nutrients to the soil and reduce Al3+ activity. | [ | |
| 2.0, (60–80 cm); 50 days | Ameliorated subsoil acidity; Increased Ca in soil solution; Reduced exchangeable Al, and increased in crop growth. | [ | ||
| 2.0, (40–60 cm), 90 days | Decreased exchangeable Al; increased Ca in topsoil as well as plant leaf; increase root density. | [ | ||
| 2.5, (0–25 cm), 1.5 years | Reduced toxic Al concentration in soil solution and exchange site in subterranean clover-based pasture. | [ | ||
| 34.9% PG; (5 × 7 × 5 cm) | Reduced soil acidity; decreased Al activity of in the soil solution; increased root development. | [ | ||
| Gypsum (G) | 2.0, (0–20 cm) | Balanced nutrient elements; increased forage quality and yield; reduced exchangeable Al; increased soil pH. | [ | |
| 4.4, 60 days | Enhanced Ca and S contents; reduced Al concentration and lipid peroxidation in roots and leaves; Ameliorated Al toxicity in plant by gypsum. | [ | ||
| 1.0, 60 days | Reduced Al phytotoxicity; increased nodules, pods, and yield of groundnut. | [ | ||
| 22.2, (0–75 cm), 12 years | Provided Ca and S benefits as a source in nutrient-limiting soils; enhanced soil fertility and alfalfa growth. | [ | ||
| 11.0, (40–60 cm), 1 year | Improved root density; Increased Ca, Mg, and SO4-S; declined the level of exchangeable Al. | [ |
Mineral nutrition induced protection in plants under Al toxicity.
| Plant Species | Dose and Duration of Al Exposure | Mineral Treatment | Plant Responses | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 µM Al, 24 h | 500–2000 µM Ca, 3 days | Mitigated the inhibition of root growth and root hair formation during Al toxicity; enhanced protection against the deleterious effect of toxic Al in soybean. | [ | |
| 20 µM Al, 28 days | 1600 µM Ca; 800 µM Mg, 7 days | Ca and Mg alleviated Al toxicity in wheat, respectively; decreased Al3+ activity at PM surface in root cell. | [ | |
| 100 mM Al, 72 h | 25 µM Mg, 3 days | Increased root growth; Alleviated Al rhizotoxicity during lateral root elongation. | [ | |
| 5 mM Al, 20 weeks | 200 µM P; 140 days | Al resistant G9 clone, enhanced more malate, oxalate, and citrate secretion in roots; P was involved in elemental Al fixation in roots, and restricted Al transport to the stems and leaves; Increased the activities of | [ | |
|
| 1 mM Al, 16 days | 0.5 mM S, 126 days | Reduced Al transport in roots, shoots and leaves; Decreased H2O2 production; Increased, P, Mg, Ca and RWC; Enhanced OAs in roots. | [ |
|
| 1.2 mM Al, 18 weeks | 20 μM B, 126 days | Over 100 genes including | [ |
| 50 µM Al, 24 h | 50 µM B, 2 days | Increased chlorophyll and biomass; reduced chlorosis; reduced Al concentration in shoots; inhibited Al-binding in cell wall; reduced toxicity effect in roots and shoots. | [ | |
| 10 mM Al, 16 days | 2.50 mM Si, 26 days | Increased | [ | |
| 50 μM Al, 7 days | 10 μM Si, 7 days | Restricted the uptake and transport of toxic Al in roots and leaves; maintained Mg and Zn at optimum levels; reduced cellular injury from Al toxicity. | [ |