October 8, 2004
Engineering high-level aluminum
tolerance in barley with the ALMT1 gene
Emmanuel Delhaize, Peter R. Ryan, Diane M. Hebb, Yoko
Yamamoto, Takayuki Sasaki, and Hideaki Matsumoto
PNAS published 7 October 2004, 10.1073/pnas.0406258101
ABSTRACT
Acidity is a serious
limitation to plant production on many of the world's
agricultural soils. Toxic aluminium (Al) cations
solubilized by the acidity rapidly inhibit root
growth and limit subsequent uptake of water and
nutrients. Recent work has shown that the ALMT1 gene of
wheat (Triticum aestivum) encodes a malate
transporter that is associated with malate efflux and
Al tolerance. We generated transgenic barley (Hordeum
vulgare) plants expressing ALMT1 and
assessed their ability to exude malate and withstand Al
stress. ALMT1 expression in barley conferred an
Al-activated efflux of malate with properties similar
to those of Al-tolerant wheat. The transgenic barley
showed a high level of Al tolerance when grown in
both hydroponic culture and on acid soils. These
findings provide additional evidence that ALMT1 is a
major Al-tolerance gene and demonstrate its ability
to confer effective tolerance to acid soils through a
transgenic approach in an important crop species.
Link:
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/0406258101v1?etoc
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