Endodermal suberin restricts root leakage of cesium: a suitable tracer for potassium

An urgent challenge within crop production is to maintain productivity in a world plagued by climate change and its associated plant stresses, such as heat, drought and salinity. A key factor in this endeavor is to understand the dynamics of root suberization, and its role in plant‐water relations a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physiologia plantarum 2024-05, Vol.176 (3), p.e14393-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Vestenaa, Morten Winther, Husted, Søren, Minutello, Francesco, Persson, Daniel Pergament
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:An urgent challenge within crop production is to maintain productivity in a world plagued by climate change and its associated plant stresses, such as heat, drought and salinity. A key factor in this endeavor is to understand the dynamics of root suberization, and its role in plant‐water relations and nutrient transport. This study focuses on the hypothesis that endodermal suberin, acts as a physical barrier preventing radial potassium (K) movement out of the vascular tissues during translocation. Previous attempts to experimentally support this idea have produced inconsistent results. We developed a Laser Ablation‐Inductively Coupled Plasma‐Mass Spectrometry (LA‐ICP‐MS) method, allowing us to visualize the distribution of mineral elements and track K movement. Cesium (Cs), dosed in optimized concentrations, was found to be an ideal tracer for K, due to its low background and similar chemical/biological properties. In suberin mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana, we observed a positive correlation between suberin levels and K translocation efficiency, indicating that suberin enhances the plant's ability to retain K within the vascular tissues during translocation from root to shoot. In barley (Hordeum vulgare), fully suberized seminal roots maintained higher K concentrations in the stele compared to younger, less suberized root zones. This suggests that suberization increases with root maturity, enhancing the barrier against K leakage. In nodal roots, suberin was scattered towards the phloem in mature root zones. Despite this incomplete suberization, nodal roots still restrict outward K movement, demonstrating that even partial suberin barriers can significantly reduce K loss. Our findings provide evidence that suberin is a barrier to K leakage during root‐to‐shoot translocation. This understanding is crucial to maintain crop productivity in the face of climate change.
ISSN:0031-9317
1399-3054
1399-3054
DOI:10.1111/ppl.14393