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Translational asymmetry as a sensitive indicator of cadmium stress in plants: a laboratory test with wild-type and mutant Arabidopsis thaliana |
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Author: Tan-Kristanto, A.; Hoffmann, A.; Woods, R.;
Batterham, P.; Cobbett, C.; Sinclair, C.
Year: 2003
Title: Translational asymmetry as a sensitive
indicator of cadmium stress in plants: a laboratory test with wild-type and
mutant Arabidopsis thaliana
Journal: New Phytologist
Volume: 159
Pages: 471-477
Date: Aug
Abstract: Translational and bilateral asymmetry have
been proposed as sensitive measures of stress in plants, but few studies have
addressed the asymmetry-stress association for individuals grown under strictly
defined conditions. Here, we assess the impact of cadmium (Cd) stress on
various asymmetry measures in a wild-type and mutant strain of Arabidopsis
thaliana . Fitness measures (fresh weight, pod count and shoot length) and
developmental stability (DS) measures (bilateral asymmetry and translational
asymmetry (TA)) were compared between plants grown under different cadmium
concentrations. Cadmium stress sharply increased TA in both strains but had
inconsistent effects on bilateral asymmetry. The TA effects were detected at a
Cd concentration when effects on growth and reproduction were not yet evident.
Translational asymmetry, but not bilateral asymmetry, may therefore act as a
sensitive indicator of cadmium stress and could be used to assess soil
contamination in transplanted A. thaliana .
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