Abstract

BackgroundHydroponic growth systems are a convenient platform for studying whole plant physiology. However, we found through trialling systems as they are described in the literature that our experiments were frequently confounded by factors that affected plant growth, including algal contamination and hypoxia. We also found the way in which the plants were grown made them poorly amenable to a number of common physiological assays.ResultsThe drivers for the development of this hydroponic system were: 1) the exclusion of light from the growth solution; 2) to simplify the handling of individual plants, and 3) the growth of the plant to allow easy implementation of multiple assays. These aims were all met by the use of pierced lids of black microcentrifuge tubes. Seed was germinated on a lid filled with an agar-containing germination media immersed in the same solution. Following germination, the liquid growth media was exchanged with the experimental solution, and after 14-21 days seedlings were transferred to larger tanks with aerated solution where they remained until experimentation. We provide details of the protocol including composition of the basal growth solution, and separate solutions with altered calcium, magnesium, potassium or sodium supply whilst maintaining the activity of the majority of other ions. We demonstrate the adaptability of this system for: gas exchange measurement on single leaves and whole plants; qRT-PCR to probe the transcriptional response of roots or shoots to altered nutrient composition in the growth solution (we demonstrate this using high and low calcium supply); producing highly competent mesophyll protoplasts; and, accelerating the screening of Arabidopsis transformants. This system is also ideal for manipulating plants for micropipette techniques such as electrophysiology or SiCSA.ConclusionsWe present an optimised plant hydroponic culture system that can be quickly and cheaply constructed, and produces plants with similar growth kinetics to soil-grown plants, but with the advantage of being a versatile platform for a myriad of physiological and molecular biological measurements on all plant tissues at all developmental stages. We present ‘tips and tricks’ for the easy adoption of this hydroponic culture system.

Highlights

  • Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. (Arabidopsis) has been adopted as a model plant of choice in many laboratories for a variety of reasons

  • We found that the expression levels of genes matched previous reports, including the higher shoot expression of AtCAX1 and the higher root expression of both AtCAX2 and AtACA2 (Figure 3, Additional file 3) [26,27]

  • The lower affinity Ca2+-transport capacity of AtCAX2 compared to AtCAX1 [29,30] may contribute to the lower Ca storage of the vacuole under these conditions [19,20,21]. The fact that both genes are preferentially expressed in the mesophyll, adds further evidence to suggest that AtACA2 and AtCAX2 may play a minor role in leaf Ca compartmentation, as this is where the majority of Ca is stored [19,20,21,29]

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Summary

METHODOLOGY

Protocol: optimising hydroponic growth systems for nutritional and physiological analysis of Arabidopsis thaliana and other plants. Simon J Conn, Bradleigh Hocking, Maclin Dayod, Bo Xu1,2, Asmini Athman, Sam Henderson, Lucy Aukett, Vanessa Conn, Monique K Shearer, Sigfredo Fuentes, Stephen D Tyerman and Matthew Gilliham1,2*

Results
Conclusions
Introduction
Initiative TAG
16. Coosemans J
26. Hirschi KD
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