Ethylene and Phloem Signals Are Involved in the Regulation of Responses to Fe and P Deficiencies in Roots of Strategy I Plants

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Author
Lucena, Carlos
Porras, Rafael
García, María J.
Alcántara, Esteban
Pérez-Vicente, Rafael
Zamarreño, Ángel María
Bacaicoa, Eva
García-Mina, José M.
Smith, Aaron P.
Romera, Francisco Javier
Publisher
FrontiersDate
2019Subject
EthyleneIron
Phloem
Phosphorus
Signals
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Show full item recordAbstract
Iron (Fe) and phosphorus (P) are two essential mineral nutrients whose acquisition by
plants presents important environmental and economic implications. Both elements are
abundant in most soils but scarcely available to plants. To prevent Fe or P deficiency
dicot plants initiate morphological and physiological responses in their roots aimed
to specifically acquire these elements. The existence of common signals in Fe and P
deficiency pathways suggests the signaling factors must act in conjunction with distinct
nutrient-specific signals in order to confer tolerance to each deficiency. Previous works
have shown the existence of cross talk between responses to Fe and P deficiency, but
details of the associated signaling pathways remain unclear. Herein, the impact of foliar
application of either P or Fe on P and Fe responses was studied in P- or Fe-deficient
plants of Arabidopsis thaliana, including mutants exhibiting altered Fe or P homeostasis.
Ferric reductase and acid phosphatase activities in roots were determined as well as the
expression of genes related to P and Fe acquisition. The results obtained showed that
Fe deficiency induces the expression of P acquisition genes and phosphatase activity,
whereas P deficiency induces the expression of Fe acquisition genes and ferric reductase
activity, although only transitorily. Importantly, these responses were reversed upon foliar
application of either Fe or P on nutrient-starved plants. Taken together, the results reveal
interactions between P- and Fe-related phloem signals originating in the shoots that likely
interact with hormones in the roots to initiate adaptive mechanisms to tolerate deficiency
of each nutrient.
