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Hypoxia and bicarbonate could block the expression of iron acquisition genes in Strategy I plants by affecting ethylene synthesis and signalling in different ways

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Author
García del Rosal, María José
García-Mateo, María J.
Lucena, Carlos
Romera, Francisco Javier
Rojas, Carmen L.
Alcántara, Esteban
Pérez-Vicente, Rafael
Publisher
Wiley
Date
2014
Subject
Bicarbonate
Ethylene
Iron deficiency
Ferric reductase
FRO2
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Abstract
In a previous work, it was shown that bicarbonate (one of the most important factors causing Fe chlorosis in Strategy I plants) can limit the expression of several genes involved in Fe acquisition. Hypoxia is considered another important factor causing Fe chlorosis, mainly on calcareous soils. However, to date it is not known whether hypoxia aggravates Fe chlorosis by affecting bicarbonate concentration or by specific negative effects on Fe acquisition. Results found in this work show that hypoxia, generated by eliminating the aeration of the nutrient solution, can limit the expression of several Fe acquisition genes in Fe-deficient Arabidopsis, cucumber and pea plants, like the genes for ferric reductases AtFRO2, PsFRO1 and CsFRO1; iron transporters AtIRT1, PsRIT1 and CsIRT1; H+-ATPaseCsHA1; and transcription factors AtFIT , AtbHLH38, and AtbHLH39. Interestingly, the limitation of the expression of Fe-acquisition genes by hypoxia did not occur in the Arabidopsis ethylene constitutive mutant ctr1, which suggests that the negative effect of hypoxia is related to ethylene, an hormone involved in the upregulation of Fe acquisition genes. As for hypoxia, results obtained by applying bicarbonate to the nutrient solution suggests that ethylene is also involved in its negative effect, since ACC (1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid; ethylene precursor) partially reversed the negative effect of bicarbonate on the expression of Fe acquisition genes. Taken together, the results obtained show that hypoxia and bicarbonate could induce Fe chlorosis by limiting the expression of Fe acquisition genes, probably because each factor negatively affects different steps of ethylene synthesis and/or signaling.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10396/35190
Fuente
García, M. J., García‐Mateo, M. J., Lucena, C., Romera, F. J., Rojas, C. L., Alcántara, E., & Pérez‐Vicente, R. (2014). Hypoxia and bicarbonate could limit the expression of iron acquisition genes in Strategy I plants by affecting ethylene synthesis and signaling in different ways. Physiologia Plantarum, 150(1), 95-106. https://doi.org/10.1111/ppl.12076
Versión del Editor
https://doi.org/10.1111/ppl.12076
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