4.8 Article

Phosphate Starvation Alters Abiotic-Stress-Induced Cytosolic Free Calcium Increases in Roots

Journal

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 179, Issue 4, Pages 1754-1767

Publisher

AMER SOC PLANT BIOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.1104/pp.18.01469

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Funding

  1. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council Doctoral Training Programme [BB/J014540/1]
  2. Broodbank Trust
  3. Ministero dell'Istruzione dell'Universita e della Ricerca
  4. University of Milan Transition Grant (Horizon 2020, Fondo di Ricerca Linea 1A Progetto Unimi Partenariati H2020)
  5. Piano di Sviluppo di Ateneo 2016
  6. Fondo per gli Investimenti della Ricerca di Base [FIRB 2010 RBFR10S1LJ_001]
  7. Piano di Sviluppo di Ateneo 2017

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Phosphate (Pi) deficiency strongly limits plant growth, and plant roots foraging the soil for nutrients need to adapt to optimize Pi uptake. Ca2+ is known to signal in root development and adaptation but has to be tightly controlled, as it is highly toxic to Pi metabolism. Under Pi starvation and the resulting decreased cellular Pi pool, the use of cytosolic free Ca2+([Ca2+](cyt)) as a signal transducer may therefore have to be altered. Employing aequorin-expressing Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), we show that Pi starvation, but not nitrogen starvation, strongly dampens the [Ca2+](cyt) increases evoked by mechanical, salt, osmotic, and oxidative stress as well as by extracellular nucleotides. The altered root [Ca2+](cyt) response to extracellular ATP manifests during seedling development under chronic Pi deprivation but can be reversed by Pi resupply. Employing ratiometric imaging, we delineate that Pi-starved roots have a normal response to extracellular ATP at the apex but show a strongly dampened [Ca2+](cyt) response in distal parts of the root tip, correlating with high reactive oxygen species levels induced by Pi starvation. Excluding iron, as well as Pi, rescues this altered [Ca2+](cyt) response and restores reactive oxygen species levels to those seen under nutrient-replete conditions. These results indicate that, while Pi availability does not seem to be signaled through [Ca2+](cyt) Pi starvation strongly affects stress-induced[Ca2+](cyt )signatures. These data reveal how plants can integrate nutritional and environmental cues, adding another layer of complexity to the use of Ca(2+)as a signal transducer.

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