Phosphate Fiasco?
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
West Lafayette, IND. (11/7/97)- Without phosphate, plants
cannot grow and bloom. Yet current reserves of phosphates used in fertilizers
may be exhausted in the less than a hundred years. The isolation of the
gene responsible for phosphate uptake in plants may lead to the development
of plants better able to process the essential nutrient.
"Lack of phosphorus fertilizer is going to be a serious problem in the
future in certain parts of the United States and especially in the tropics,
unless we find another source of phosphorus in the world or unless we create
plants that are more efficient phosphorus users," says K.G. Raghothama,
Purdue assistant professor of horticulture.
Arabidopsis thaliana
Nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium are the big three of plant nutrition.
Of these, phosphorus is the hardest for plants to get out of soil. The
degree of phosphorus availability varies from place to place, but many
soils jealously guard their phosphorus supplies. For example, the very
acid soils of the tropics contain many molecules of iron and aluminum,
which latch onto and tie up nearly all available phosphorus.
"We also have problems in the Southeastern United States and on
calcareous soils in the Great Plains of the American West," says Purdue
agronomist Dave Mengel. "In alkaline soils of the West, calcium reacts
with the phosphorus and essentially fixes it. Midwestern soils hold the
mineral less tightly, but generally still require annual applications of
phosphorus to keep crops healthy. Even in the Midwest, soil phosphorus
is the least available of the big three nutrients."
The current approach to this problem is to amend soils with phosphorus
extracted from rock phosphate mines. Canadian researchers recently dtermined
that known reserves of phosphate in these mines will be depleted by 2090.
Researchers at Purdue University have made an important discovery, the
isolation of the genes that help plant roots take up phosphate.
The researchers began by studying the ways plants adapt to phosphorus-poor
conditions. Some plants make internal changes to bring in more of the mineral,
while others develop more roots. Still other plants produce and release
rganic acids and enzymes that can pry the nutrient away from the attraction
of the soil clay and organic matter. And in some cases, phosphorus starvation
flips a genetic switch that changes certain molecules in roots and makes
plants better at acquiring phosphate.
The Purdue team. in collaboration with researchers at the Instituto
de Recursos Naturales y Agrobiologia in Spain, concentrated on plants'
genetic and molecular responses to phosphorus deficiency. They hoped to
find out what mechanism makes plants better at phosphorus uptake, then
track down the genes that turn on that mechanism.
The researchers starved Arabidopsis plants (a member of the mustard
family often used as a model system for research) for a week, figuring
that this would cause the plants to beef up their phosphate uptake mechanisms.
It did.
Then they probed the DNA libraries of the starved plants for genes
that produce phosphate transporter proteins. They found the genes there,
isolated them, and decoded them. They also noted that the phosphate-starved
plants sent out significantly more messages calling for production of phosphate
transporter proteins.
"The phosphate transporter sits on the cell membrane and transfers phosphate
through the membrane along with hydrogen ions," Raghothama says. "We've
known about this for a long time in yeast and fungi, but before our work,
phosphate transporter genes were not isolated from higher plants. Now we
are in a better position to understand how phosphorus is taken up by plants,
to make changes to the genes involved, and to create plants that are efficient
acquirers of phosphorus," Raghothama says.
The work was reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Science.
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