Abstract

Plants have a potential for the uptake and accumulation of essential and non-essential trace elements. The ability to take up and tolerate metals varies between and within species as well as between metals. For most metals, the mechanisms involved in plant tolerance, uptake and accumulation are still not fully known and it is not known to what extent the plant response is metal-specific rather than a general stress response. In the present study, the growth response of soybean to Cd, As, Al and NaCl was compared and contrasted to simple sequence repeat (SSR) marker analysis results for Cda1, a dominant gene located in a major quantitative trait locus that regulates Cd accumulation in soybean, to evaluate the hypothesis that general effect patterns are induced by the individual metals. Principal component analysis revealed that the root growth response was most diverse for Al exposure and decreased in the order of Al > As > Cd > NaCl. NaCl did not exert a differentiating effect, indicating response mechanisms similar, at least partially, to metal exposure. The applied stressors yielded a distinguishable pattern of root responses, indicating the potential of such screens to identify agents acting similarly or differently. The SSR marker analysis also facilitated characterization of the Cd accumulation potential of the 22 soybean cultivars studied, and thereby identification of cultivars with potential health risk under cultivation in Cd-contaminated soils.

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