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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: chelator ; copper ; hydroponics ; iron ; manganese ; plant nutrition ; Poaceae ; phytosiderophore ; stress response ; zinc
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Phytosiderophore release occurs under both iron and zinc deficiencies in representative Poaceae and has been speculated to be a general adaptive response to enhance the acquisition of micronutrient metals. To test this hypothesis, phytosiderophore (PS) release rates from barley (Hordeum vulgare cv. CM72) subjected to deficiencies of Fe, Zn, Mn, and Cu were compared using chelator-buffered nutrient solutions. PS release rates were determined at two day intervals during onset and development of deficiency symptoms. Plant dry matter yields and nutrient concentrations, measured at three time points were used to construct growth curves for calculation of PS release per unit root mass and estimation of critical internal nutrient levels associated with PS release. In comparison to trace metal-sufficient control plants, dry matter production was markedly reduced in the Zn, Mn, and Cu deficiency treatments, with final relative yields of 49, 61, and 34%, respectively. Relative yields for Fe-deficient plants grown at three suboptimal Fe levels ranged from 95 to 33% of control, and provided a basis for comparison of PS release rates by Zn-, Mn-, and Cu-deficient plants at similar levels of growth inhibition. Under Fe deficiency, PS release increased with severity of the deficiency as measured by foliar Fe concentration, yield reduction, and chlorosis. Changes in PS release rates over time suggested a cyclical pattern that may be regulated by Fe concentration in the plant shoot. The highest rate of PS release (35 μmol g−1 root dw 2 h−1) was measured after 10 days of growth at pFe 19, whereas control plants adapted for growth at pFe 17 released only 2 to 3 μmol g−1 root dw 2 h−1. In a second experiment, maximum PS release rates for barley subjected to Zn, Mn, and Cu deficiencies were only 2.6, 2.5 and 1 μmol g−1 2 h−1, respectively and were only slightly elevated over those of the control plants (ca. 1 μmol g−1 root dw 2 h−1) grown at pFe 16.5. Moreover, enhanced PS release under Zn deficiency occurred much later, after the deficiency had already caused severely reduced growth. The results suggest that phytosiderophore release in this barley cultivar is a specific response to Fe deficiency and is not significantly induced in response to deficiencies of other trace metals.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Plant and soil 196 (1997), S. 223-228 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: bioavailability ; copper ; speciation ; toxicity ; trace elements
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract The plant uptake and toxicity of many metals show a marked dependence on the aqueous speciation of the metal, and these responses often correlate best with the activity of the free metal ion. Exceptions to this generalization have been observed, however, and we sought to critically reexamine the theoretical foundation of the free-ion activity model (FIAM) of metal bioavailability to higher plants. Binding by an apoplastic functional group is often envisioned as a requisite step in the absorption or toxicity of a metal, and can be modeled in a variety of ways. Typically, however, speciation of the bulk solution is calculated without regard to such surface binding, even though it could influence the pertinent mass balance expressions. A more thorough treatment considers simultaneous formation of both the metal-ligand complex in solution (ML) and the metal-cell surface complex (M-X). Here, empirical conformity to the FIAM can be expected, but only under pivotal assumptions about the relative sizes of the test solution and the root biomass, and about the relative binding strength of L and -X. Moreover, empirical conformity to the FIAM does not preclude cell-surface binding of the complexed metal followed by ligand exchange (ML + -X ⇆ M-X + L), so that correlations between biological response and free metal-ion activity imply nothing about the molecular species that actually interacts with the cell surface. Computer simulations of Cu (II) binding by a model apoplastic ligand are used to illustrate these and other key features of the FIAM. Departures from the FIAM seem most likely when (i) the quantity of the metal-complexing ligand is limited (as may be the case in soil solution or in the rhizosphere), and/or (ii) the solution ligand is very weak.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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