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1.
Plant Physiol Biochem ; 201: 107838, 2023 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37364510

RESUMEN

Perennial plants are frequently exposed to severe and prolonged drought, and when the balance between water transport and transpirational demand is compromised trees are in danger of embolism formation. To maintain the physiological balance, plants can rely on mechanisms to quickly recover the lost xylem hydraulic capacity and reduce the prolonged impact on photosynthetic activity upon rehydration. Among factors helpful for plants to sustain acclimation and adaptation responses to drought and promote recovery, maintaining an optimal nutritional status is crucial for plant survival. This study aimed to investigate the physiological and biochemical responses under drought and recovery of Populus nigra plants grown in soil with impaired nutrient bioavailability obtained by adding calcium oxide (CaO) to the substrate. Although the CaO treatment did not affect plant growth, in well-watered conditions, treated poplars displayed an impaired inorganic ions profile in tissues. Under drought, although CaO-treated and untreated plants showed similar physiological responses, the former closed the stomata earlier. During water stress relief, the CaO-treated poplars exhibited a faster stomatal opening and a higher capacity to restore xylem hydraulic conductivity compared to not-treated plants, probably due to the higher osmolyte accumulation during drought. The content of some inorganic ions (e.g, Ca2+ and Cl-) was also higher in the xylem sap collected from stressed CaO-treated plants, thus contributing to increase the osmotic gradient necessary for the recovery. Taken together, our results suggest that CaO treatment promotes a faster and more efficient plant recovery after drought due to a modulation of ions homeostasis.


Asunto(s)
Sequías , Populus , Suelo/química , Hojas de la Planta/fisiología , Populus/fisiología , Iones , Xilema/fisiología
2.
New Phytol ; 239(1): 271-285, 2023 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37167003

RESUMEN

Coffee is one of the most traded commodities world-wide. As with 70% of land plants, coffee is associated with arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, but the molecular bases of this interaction are unknown. We studied the mycorrhizal phenotype of two commercially important Coffea arabica cultivars ('Typica National' and 'Catimor Amarillo'), upon Funnelliformis mosseae colonisation grown under phosphorus limitation, using an integrated functional approach based on multi-omics, physiology and biochemistry. The two cultivars revealed a strong biomass increase upon mycorrhization, even at low level of fungal colonisation, improving photosynthetic efficiency and plant nutrition. The more important iconic markers of AM symbiosis were activated: We detected two gene copies of AM-inducible phosphate (Pt4), ammonium (AM2) and nitrate (NPF4.5) transporters, which were identified as belonging to the C. arabica parental species (C. canephora and C. eugenioides) with both copies being upregulated. Transcriptomics data were confirmed by ions and metabolomics analyses, which highlighted an increased amount of glucose, fructose and flavonoid glycosides. In conclusion, both coffee cultivars revealed a high responsiveness to the AM fungus along their root-shoot axis, showing a clear-cut re-organisation of the major metabolic pathways, which involve nutrient acquisition, carbon fixation, and primary and secondary metabolism.


Asunto(s)
Coffea , Micorrizas , Micorrizas/genética , Coffea/genética , Café/metabolismo , Fotosíntesis , Perfilación de la Expresión Génica
3.
Front Plant Sci ; 13: 837517, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35360342

RESUMEN

The use of sulfur (S) stable isotopes to study S metabolism in plants is still limited by the relatively small number of studies. It is generally accepted that less S stable isotope discrimination occurs during sulfate (SO4 2-) uptake. However, S metabolism and allocation are expected to produce separations of S stable isotopes among the different plant S pools and organs. In this study, we measured the S isotope composition of the main S pools of rice plants grown under different SO4 2- availabilities in appropriate closed and open hydroponic-plant systems. The main results indicate that fractionation against 34S occurred during SO4 2- uptake. Fractionation was dependent on the amount of residual SO4 2- in the solution, showing a biphasic behavior related to the relative expression of two SO4 2- transporter genes (OsSULTR1;1 and OsSULTR1;2) in the roots. S isotope separations among S pools and organs were also observed as the result of substantial S isotope fractionations and mixing effects occurring during SO4 2- assimilation and plant S partitioning. Since the S stable isotope separations conserve the memory of the physiological and metabolic activities that determined them, we here underline the potential of the 32S/34S analysis for the detailed characterization of the metabolic and molecular processes involved in plant S nutrition and homeostasis.

4.
Plants (Basel) ; 11(6)2022 Mar 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35336686

RESUMEN

Durum wheat is one of the most important agricultural crops, currently providing 18% of the daily intake of calories and 20% of daily protein intake for humans. However, being wheat that is cultivated in arid and semiarid areas, its productivity is threatened by drought stress, which is being exacerbated by climate change. Therefore, the identification of drought tolerant wheat genotypes is critical for increasing grain yield and also improving the capability of crops to uptake and assimilate nutrients, which are seriously affected by drought. This work aimed to determine the effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) on plant growth under normal and limited water availability in two durum wheat genotypes (Svevo and Etrusco). Furthermore, we investigated how the plant nutritional status responds to drought stress. We found that the response of Svevo and Etrusco to drought stress was differentially affected by AMF. Interestingly, we revealed that AMF positively affected sulfur homeostasis under drought conditions, mainly in the Svevo cultivar. The results provide a valuable indication that the identification of drought tolerant plants cannot ignore their nutrient use efficiency or the impact of other biotic soil components (i.e., AMF).

5.
Plants (Basel) ; 10(4)2021 Apr 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33923918

RESUMEN

Two rice accessions, Capataz and Beirao, contrasting for cadmium (Cd) tolerance and root retention, were exposed to a broad range of Cd concentrations (0.01, 0.1, and 1 µM) and analyzed for their potential capacity to chelate, compartmentalize, and translocate Cd to gain information about the relative contribution of these processes in determining the different pathways of Cd distribution along the plants. In Capataz, Cd root retention increased with the external Cd concentration, while in Beirao it resulted independent of Cd availability and significantly higher than in Capataz at the lowest Cd concentrations analyzed. Analysis of thiol accumulation in the roots revealed that the different amounts of these compounds in Capataz and Beirao, as well as the expression levels of genes involved in phytochelatin biosynthesis and direct Cd sequestration into the vacuoles of the root cells, were not related to the capacity of the accessions to trap the metal into the roots. Interestingly, the relative transcript abundance of OsHMA2, a gene controlling root-to-shoot Cd/Zn translocation, was not influenced by Cd exposure in Capataz and progressively increased in Beirao with the external Cd concentration, suggesting that activity of the OsHMA2 transporter may differentially limit root-to-shoot Cd/Zn translocation in Capataz and Beirao.

6.
Front Plant Sci ; 8: 854, 2017.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28588602

RESUMEN

The processes involved in cadmium detoxification in plants deeply affect sulfate uptake and thiol homeostasis and generate increases in the plant nutritional request for sulfur. Here, we present an analysis of the dependence of Arabidopsis growth on the concentration of sulfate in the growing medium with the aim of providing evidence on how plants optimize growth at a given sulfate availability. Results revealed that short-term (72 h) exposure to a broad range of Cd concentrations (0.1, 1, and 10 µM) inhibited plant growth but did not produce any significant effects on the growth pattern of both shoots and roots in relation to the external sulfate. Conversely, long-term (22 days) exposure to 0.1 µM Cd significantly changed the pattern of fresh weight accumulation of the shoots in relation to the external sulfate, without affecting that of the roots, although their growth was severely inhibited by Cd. Moreover, under long-term exposure to Cd, increasing the sulfate external concentration up to the critical value progressively reduced the inhibitory effects exerted by Cd on shoot growth, indicating the existence of sulfate-dependent adaptive responses protecting the shoot tissues against Cd injury. Transcriptional induction of the high-affinity sulfate transporter genes (SULTR1; 1 and SULTR1; 2) involved in sulfate uptake by roots was a common adaptive response to both short- and long-term exposure to Cd. Such a response was closely related to the total amount of non-protein thiols accumulated by a single plant under short-term exposure to Cd, but did not showed any clear relation with thiols under long-term exposure to Cd. In this last condition, Cd exposure did not change the level of non-protein thiols per plant and thus did not alter the nutritional need for sulfur. In conclusion, our results indicate that long term-exposure to Cd, although it induces sulfate uptake, decreases the capacity of the Arabidopsis roots to efficiently absorb the sulfate ions available in the growing medium making the adaptive response of SULTR1; 1 and SULTR1; 2 "per se" not enough to optimize the growth at sulfate external concentrations lower than the critical value.

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