Abstract

Low phosphorus (P) availability is a major constraint to crop growth and production, including soybean (Glycine max), on a global scale. However, 50% to 80% of the total P in agricultural soils exists as organic phosphate, which is unavailable to plants unless hydrolyzed to release inorganic phosphate. One strategy for improving crop P nutrition is the enhanced activity of acid phosphatases (APases) to obtain or remobilize inorganic phosphate from organic P sources. In this study, we overexpressed an Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) purple APase gene (AtPAP15) containing a carrot (Daucus carota) extracellular targeting peptide in soybean hairy roots and found that the APase activity was increased by 1.5-fold in transgenic hairy roots. We subsequently transformed soybean plants with AtPAP15 and studied three homozygous overexpression lines of AtPAP15. The three transgenic lines exhibited significantly improved P efficiency with 117.8%, 56.5%, and 57.8% increases in plant dry weight, and 90.1%, 18.2%, and 62.6% increases in plant P content, respectively, as compared with wild-type plants grown on sand culture containing phytate as the sole P source. The transgenic soybean lines also exhibited a significant level of APase and phytase activity in leaves and root exudates, respectively. Furthermore, the transgenic lines exhibited improved yields when grown on acid soils, with 35.9%, 41.0%, and 59.0% increases in pod number per plant, and 46.0%, 48.3%, and 66.7% increases in seed number per plant. Taken together, to our knowledge, our study is the first report on the improvement of P efficiency in soybean through constitutive expression of a plant APase gene. These findings could have significant implications for improving crop yield on soils low in available P, which is a serious agricultural limitation worldwide.

Highlights

  • Low phosphorus (P) availability is a major constraint to crop growth and production, including soybean (Glycine max), on a global scale

  • Pod number per plant, and 46.0%, 48.3%, and 66.7% increases in seed number per plant, respectively, as compared with wild-type plants on acid soils (Table I). Both hairy root and whole-plant transformation systems were used to test the effects on plant P nutrition of overexpressing a heterologous Arabidopsis purple acid phosphatases (APases) gene (AtPAP15) in soybean

  • The results indicated that both APase activity in hairy roots and APase secretion from hairy roots were increased in AtPAP15 transgenic lines as compared with hairy roots transformed with the control vector (Fig. 2, A and B)

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Summary

Introduction

Low phosphorus (P) availability is a major constraint to crop growth and production, including soybean (Glycine max), on a global scale. The transgenic soybean lines exhibited a significant level of APase and phytase activity in leaves and root exudates, respectively. To our knowledge, our study is the first report on the improvement of P efficiency in soybean through constitutive expression of a plant APase gene. These findings could have significant implications for improving crop yield on soils low in available P, which is a serious agricultural limitation worldwide. Overexpression of AtPAP15 increased the secretion of APase from transgenic soybean hairy roots and roots of whole transgenic soybean plants, and significantly improved APase activity in leaves, as well as P efficiency and yield in the transgenic soybean lines. This study could have significant implications for improving crop production on low-P soils, which is a serious agronomic limitation worldwide

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