A reliable screening system for aluminium tolerance in barley cultivars
Mamun Hossain A , Meixue Zhou A C and Neville Mendham BA Tasmanian Institute of Agricultural Research, Mt Pleasant Laboratories, PO Box 46, Kings Meadows, Tas. 7249, Australia.
B School of Agricultural Science, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 54, Hobart, Tas. 7001, Australia.
C Corresponding author. Email: Meixue.Zhou@dpiwe.tas.gov.au
Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 56(5) 475-482 https://doi.org/10.1071/AR04191
Submitted: 18 August 2004 Accepted: 18 March 2005 Published: 31 May 2005
Abstract
Aluminium (Al) toxicity in the soil is an important factor that limits the production of barley in areas with acid soil. Selection and breeding of barley cultivars tolerant to Al toxicity is one of the most useful approaches to increase productivity. A reliable screening system is very important for selecting Al-tolerant plants in a breeding program. Using a hydroponic culture technique in which all the treatments were isolated in order to minimise complex interaction between genotypes, experiments were conducted to distinguish between susceptible and tolerant cultivars. Three different methods were investigated. Two previously reported methods could not provide consistent results or detect the difference between tolerant and susceptible cultivars. A new method was developed as follows: pre-germinated seedlings (2 days at 22°C) were cultured for 3 days in nutrient solution (Al free) followed by 24 h growing in a solution with 50 or 100 µm Al, and then 48 h regrowth in Al free nutrient solution. Following this method, seminal root regrowth length (SRRL) and relative seminal root regrowth length (RSRRL) showed significant differences between tolerant and sensitive cultivars. The SRRL of the most tolerant cultivar, Dayton, was 4–8 times greater than of the sensitive cultivars and about twice as long as of the other tolerant cultivars, FM404 and Brindabella. All the sensitive cultivars showed significantly shorter SRRL or RSRRL. Both SRRL and RSRRL were found to be closely correlated with plant height, plant dry weight, and grain weight in a soil-based experiment. This method was also used to evaluate F2 populations from crosses between tolerant and susceptible cultivars. Both SRRL and RSRRL gave results consistent with the hypothesis that the tolerance was controlled by a single dominant gene.
Additional keywords: root growth.
Acknowledgments
This work was funded by the Grains Research and Development Corporation (GRDC) of Australia.
Aniol AM
(1995) Physiological aspects of aluminium tolerance associated with the long arm of chromosome 2D of the wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) genome. Theoretical and Applied Genetics 91, 510–516.
Australian Bureau of Statistics
(2002) Australia’s land and resources—an overview. ‘Year Book Australia 2002’. (ABS: Canberra, ACT)
Bona L, Matuz J, Purnhasur L
(1991) Aluminium tolerance of Triticum aestivum L. populations related to plant-induced pH changes in nutrient solution. ‘Plant–soil interactions at low pH’. (Eds RJ Wright, VC Baligar, RP Murrmann)
pp. 1057–1062. (Kluwer Academic Publishers: Dordrecht, The Netherlands)
Cançado GMA,
Loguercio LL,
Martins PR,
Parentoni SN,
Paiva E,
Borém A, Lopes MA
(1999) Hematoxylin staining as a phenotypic index for aluminum tolerance selection in tropical maize (Zea mays L). Theoretical and Applied Genetics 99, 747–754.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Foy CD
(1992) Soil chemical factors limiting plant root growth. ‘Advances in soil science’. Vol. 19,(Eds JL Hatfield, BA Stewart)
pp. 97–149. (Springer-Verlag: New York)
Foy CD
(1996) Tolerance of barley cultivars to an acid, aluminum-toxic subsoil related to mineral element concentrations in their shoots. Journal of Plant Nutrition 19, 1361–1380.
Foy CD,
Armiger WH,
Briggle LW, Reid DA
(1965) Differential aluminum tolerances of wheat and barley varieties in acid soil. Agronomy Journal 57, 413–417.
Gallardo F,
Borie F,
Alvear M, Baer E
(1999) Evaluation of aluminum tolerance of three barley cultivars by two short-term screening methods and field experiments. Soil Science and Plant Nutrition 45, 713–719.
Genstat 6 Committee (2002).
Ma JF,
Zheng JS,
Li XF,
Takeda K, Matsumoto H
(1997) A rapid hydroponic screening for aluminium tolerance in barley. Plant and Soil 191, 133–137.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Magnavaca R, Gardner CO, Clark RB
(1987) Evaluation of inbred maize lines for aluminum tolerance in nutrient solution. ‘Genetic aspects of plant mineral nutrition’. (Eds HW Gabelman, BC Loughman, RP Murrmann)
pp. 255–265. (Martinus Nijhoff: Dordrecht, Boston, Lancaster)
Maltais K, Houde M
(2002) A new biochemical marker for aluminium tolerance in plants. Physiologia Plantarum 115, 81–86.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | PubMed |
Minella E, Sorrells ME
(1992) Aluminum tolerance in barley: genetic relationships among genotypes of diverse origin. Crop Science 32, 593–598.
Minella E, Sorrells ME
(1997) Inheritance and chromosome location of Alp, a gene controlling aluminum tolerance in ‘Dayton’ barley. Plant Breeding 116, 465–469.
Pang JY,
Zhou MX,
Mendham N, Shabala S
(2004) Growth and physiological responses of six barley genetypes to waterlogging and subsequent recovery. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 55, 895–906.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Polle E, Konzak CF
(1985) A single scale for determining Al tolerance levels in cereals. Agronomy Abstracts, p.67.
Raman H,
Moroni JS,
Sato K,
Read BJ, Scott BJ
(2002) Identification of AFLP and microsatellite markers linked with an aluminium tolerance gene in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). Theoretical and Applied Genetics 105, 458–464.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | PubMed |
Reid DA
(1970) Genetic control of reaction to aluminium in winter barley. ‘Barley genetics II’. (Ed. R Nilan)
pp. 409–413. (Washington State Univ. Press: Pullman, WA)
Ruiz-Torres NA, Carver BF
(1992) Genetic expression of aluminum tolerance in hard red winter wheat. Cereal Research Communications 20, 233–240.
Ryan PR,
Ditomaso JM, Kochian LV
(1993) Aluminium toxicity in roots: an investigation of spatial sensitivity and the role of the root cap. Journal of Experimental Botany 44, 437–446.
Shuman LM,
Wilson DO, Duncan RR
(1993) Screening wheat and sorghum cultivars for aluminum sensitivity at low aluminum levels. Journal of Plant Nutrition 16, 2383–2395.
Stølen O, Andersen S
(1978) Inheritance of tolerance to low soil pH in barley. Hereditas 88, 101–105.
Tang Y,
Sorrells ME,
Kochian LV, Garven DF
(2000) Identification of RFLP markers linked to the barley aluminium tolerance gene Alp.
Crop Science 40, 778–782.
Wagatsuma T,
Ishikawa S,
Obata H,
Tawaraya K, Katohda S
(1995) Plasma membrane of younger and outer cells is the primary specific site for aluminium toxicity in roots. Plant and Soil 171, 105–112.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Wheeler DM,
Edmeades DC,
Christie RA, Gardner R
(1992) Effect of aluminium on the growth of 34 plant species: a summary of results obtained in low ionic strength solution culture. Plant and Soil 146, 61–66.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Zhang G, Taylor GJ
(1989) Kinetics of aluminum uptake by excised roots of aluminium-tolerant and aluminium-sensitive cultivars of Triticum aestivum L. Plant Physiology 91, 1094–1099.