Abstract

Several studies have shown that differences in lipid composition and in the lipid biosynthetic pathway affect the aluminium (Al) tolerance of plants, but little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying these differences. Phospholipids create a negative charge at the surface of the plasma membrane and enhance Al sensitivity as a result of the accumulation of positively charged Al(3+) ions. The phospholipids will be balanced by other electrically neutral lipids, such as sterols. In the present research, Al tolerance was compared among pea (Pisum sativum) genotypes. Compared with Al-tolerant genotypes, the Al-sensitive genotype accumulated more Al in the root tip, had a less intact plasma membrane, and showed a lower expression level of PsCYP51, which encodes obtusifoliol-14α-demethylase (OBT 14DM), a key sterol biosynthetic enzyme. The ratio of phospholipids to sterols was higher in the sensitive genotype than in the tolerant genotypes, suggesting that the sterol biosynthetic pathway plays an important role in Al tolerance. Consistent with this idea, a transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana line with knocked-down AtCYP51 expression showed an Al-sensitive phenotype. Uniconazole-P, an inhibitor of OBT 14DM, suppressed the Al tolerance of Al-tolerant genotypes of maize (Zea mays), sorghum (Sorghum bicolor), rice (Oryza sativa), wheat (Triticum aestivum), and triticale (×Triticosecale Wittmark cv. Currency). These results suggest that increased sterol content, regulated by CYP51, with concomitant lower phospholipid content in the root tip, results in lower negativity of the plasma membrane. This appears to be a common strategy for Al tolerance among several plant species.

Highlights

  • Aluminium (Al) toxicity has been accepted to be a primary and common factor that negatively affects plant growth in acid soils

  • The ratio of phospholipids to sterols was higher in the sensitive genotype than in the tolerant genotypes, suggesting that the sterol biosynthetic pathway plays an important role in Al tolerance

  • These results suggest that increased sterol content, regulated by CYP51, with concomitant lower phospholipid content in the root tip, results in lower negativity of the plasma membrane

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Summary

Introduction

Aluminium (Al) toxicity has been accepted to be a primary and common factor that negatively affects plant growth in acid soils. Because phospholipids are responsible for the negative charge at the plasma membrane surface, the pah1pah (phosphatidate phosphohydrolase 1 and 2) mutant, which accumulates phospholipids under P-starved conditions as a result of defective P-recycling, was more Al-sensitive than the wild type under P-stressed conditions These studies have highlighted the importance of plasma membrane lipid composition in Al tolerance. Zhang et al (1996) reported that the ratio of total sterols to phospholipids in microsomal membranes isolated from 5-mm root tips was slightly higher in an Al-resistant wheat cultivar than in an Al-sensitive one This finding provided further evidence that the phospholipid contents of the plasma membrane are an important factor in Al tolerance. The results of all of these analyses fitted the model, and strongly suggested that CYP51 plays a significant role in Al tolerance

Materials and methods
Results
B Col-0 AtCYP51-KD-1
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