Below-ground plant-soil interactions affecting adaptations of rice to iron toxicity

Date

2021-10-09

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

0140-7791

Format

Free to read from

Citation

Kirk G, Manwaring H, Ueda Y, et al., (2022) Below-ground plant-soil interactions affecting adaptations of rice to iron toxicity. Plant, Cell and Environment, Volume 45, Issue 3, Special Issue: Root phenotypes for the future, March 2022, pp. 705-718

Abstract

Iron toxicity is a major constraint to rice production, particularly in highly weathered soils of inland valleys in sub-Saharan Africa where the rice growing area is rapidly expanding. There is wide variation in tolerance of iron toxicity in the rice germplasm. However, introgression of tolerance traits into high-yielding germplasm has been slow owing to the complexity of the tolerance mechanisms and large genotype-by-environment effects. We review current understanding of tolerance mechanisms, particularly those involving below-ground plant–soil interactions. Until now these have been less studied than above-ground mechanisms. We cover processes in the rhizosphere linked to exclusion of toxic ferrous iron by oxidation, and resulting effects on the mobility of nutrient ions. We also cover the molecular physiology of below-ground processes controlling iron retention in roots and root-shoot transport, and also plant iron sensing. We conclude that future breeding programmes should be based on well-characterized molecular markers for iron toxicity tolerance traits. To successfully identify such markers, the complex tolerance response should be broken down into its components based on understanding of tolerance mechanisms, and tailored screening methods should be developed for individual mechanisms.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

rice rhizosphere, root-soil interface, stress tolerance markers, submerged paddy soils

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

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