1 research outputs found
Silicon Decreases Dimethylarsinic Acid Concentration in Rice Grain and Mitigates Straighthead Disorder
While root Si transporters play a
role in the uptake of arsenite
and organic As species dimethylarsinic acid (DMA) and monomethylarsonic
acid (MMA) in rice (<i>Oryza sativa</i> L.), the impact
of Si addition on the accumulation of DMA and MMA in reproductive
tissues has not been directly evaluated, particularly in isolation
from inorganic As species. Furthermore, DMA and MMA are suspected
causal agents of straighthead disorder. We performed a hydroponic
study to disentangle the impact of Si on accumulation of DMA and MMA
in rice grain. At 5 μM, MMA was toxic to rice, regardless of
Si addition, although Si significantly decreased root MMA concentrations.
Plants dosed with 5 μM DMA grew well vegetatively but exhibited
straighthead disorder at the lowest Si dose, and this DMA-induced
yield loss reversed with increasing solution Si. Increasing Si also
significantly decreased DMA concentrations in roots, straw, husk,
and grain, particularly in mature plants. Si restricted grain DMA
through competition for root uptake and downregulation of root Si
transporters particularly at later stages of growth when Si uptake
was greatest. Our finding that DMA causes straighthead disorder under
low Si availability but not under high Si availability suggests Si
as a straighthead management strategy