Milisavljevic, Mira

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  • Milisavljevic, Mira (1)
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Liming of anthropogenically acidified soil promotes phosphorus acquisition in the rhizosphere of wheat

Kostić, Ljiljana; Nikolić, Nina; Samardžić, Jelena; Milisavljevic, Mira; Maksimović, Vuk; Čakmak, Dragan; Manojlović, Dragan D.; Nikolić, Miroslav

(Springer, New York, 2015)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Kostić, Ljiljana
AU  - Nikolić, Nina
AU  - Samardžić, Jelena
AU  - Milisavljevic, Mira
AU  - Maksimović, Vuk
AU  - Čakmak, Dragan
AU  - Manojlović, Dragan D.
AU  - Nikolić, Miroslav
PY  - 2015
UR  - https://cherry.chem.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1676
AB  - We studied the effect of liming and P fertilization of extremely acid soil (accidently acidified by sulfidic mining waste) on P availability and the subsequent adaptive responses of wheat roots. The wheat plants were grown in rhizoboxes allowing precise sampling of rhizosphere and bulk soil for sequential extraction of P fractions and determination of exchangeable Al. Root exudates were collected by pieces of paper for electrophoresis and subjected to HPLC analysis. Expression of organic anions and P-i transporter genes was analyzed by a real-time quantitative PCR. The concomitant application of lime with P fertilization increased the concentrations of plant-available P fractions in both rhizosphere and bulk compartments. The applied soil amendments strongly affected plant growth, biomass partitioning and shoot P accumulation. Liming enhanced root exudation of citrate in P unfertilized plants, while the high malate efflux was maintained until both P deficiency and Al toxicity were eliminated by the amendments. We showed the importance of liming for recovering of P acquisition potential of wheat roots, which can be strongly impaired in acid soils. Our results clearly demonstrated that P-deficient roots not subjected to Al stress in the limed soil can maintain high efflux of malate and even increase efflux of citrate along with the enhanced expression of related anion transporters (TaMATE1 and TaALMT1).
PB  - Springer, New York
T2  - Biology and Fertility of Soils
T1  - Liming of anthropogenically acidified soil promotes phosphorus acquisition in the rhizosphere of wheat
VL  - 51
IS  - 3
SP  - 289
EP  - 298
DO  - 10.1007/s00374-014-0975-y
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Kostić, Ljiljana and Nikolić, Nina and Samardžić, Jelena and Milisavljevic, Mira and Maksimović, Vuk and Čakmak, Dragan and Manojlović, Dragan D. and Nikolić, Miroslav",
year = "2015",
abstract = "We studied the effect of liming and P fertilization of extremely acid soil (accidently acidified by sulfidic mining waste) on P availability and the subsequent adaptive responses of wheat roots. The wheat plants were grown in rhizoboxes allowing precise sampling of rhizosphere and bulk soil for sequential extraction of P fractions and determination of exchangeable Al. Root exudates were collected by pieces of paper for electrophoresis and subjected to HPLC analysis. Expression of organic anions and P-i transporter genes was analyzed by a real-time quantitative PCR. The concomitant application of lime with P fertilization increased the concentrations of plant-available P fractions in both rhizosphere and bulk compartments. The applied soil amendments strongly affected plant growth, biomass partitioning and shoot P accumulation. Liming enhanced root exudation of citrate in P unfertilized plants, while the high malate efflux was maintained until both P deficiency and Al toxicity were eliminated by the amendments. We showed the importance of liming for recovering of P acquisition potential of wheat roots, which can be strongly impaired in acid soils. Our results clearly demonstrated that P-deficient roots not subjected to Al stress in the limed soil can maintain high efflux of malate and even increase efflux of citrate along with the enhanced expression of related anion transporters (TaMATE1 and TaALMT1).",
publisher = "Springer, New York",
journal = "Biology and Fertility of Soils",
title = "Liming of anthropogenically acidified soil promotes phosphorus acquisition in the rhizosphere of wheat",
volume = "51",
number = "3",
pages = "289-298",
doi = "10.1007/s00374-014-0975-y"
}
Kostić, L., Nikolić, N., Samardžić, J., Milisavljevic, M., Maksimović, V., Čakmak, D., Manojlović, D. D.,& Nikolić, M.. (2015). Liming of anthropogenically acidified soil promotes phosphorus acquisition in the rhizosphere of wheat. in Biology and Fertility of Soils
Springer, New York., 51(3), 289-298.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00374-014-0975-y
Kostić L, Nikolić N, Samardžić J, Milisavljevic M, Maksimović V, Čakmak D, Manojlović DD, Nikolić M. Liming of anthropogenically acidified soil promotes phosphorus acquisition in the rhizosphere of wheat. in Biology and Fertility of Soils. 2015;51(3):289-298.
doi:10.1007/s00374-014-0975-y .
Kostić, Ljiljana, Nikolić, Nina, Samardžić, Jelena, Milisavljevic, Mira, Maksimović, Vuk, Čakmak, Dragan, Manojlović, Dragan D., Nikolić, Miroslav, "Liming of anthropogenically acidified soil promotes phosphorus acquisition in the rhizosphere of wheat" in Biology and Fertility of Soils, 51, no. 3 (2015):289-298,
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00374-014-0975-y . .
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