4.7 Article

Silicon mitigates potassium deficiency by enhanced remobilization and modulated potassium transporter regulation

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL AND EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 198, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envexpbot.2022.104849

Keywords

Silicon nutrition; Potassium deficiency; Rubidium flux; Vacuolar potassium channel; High-affinity potassium uptake; Assimilate allocation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Silicon improves plant growth and development under stress conditions by enhancing nutrient absorption and transport efficiency. It partially recovers plants from K deficiency by affecting metabolic and transcriptional responses in roots and shoots.
Silicon (Si) improves plant growth and development especially under stress conditions. Although Si alleviates growth suppression and deficiency symptoms of several nutrient disorders, underlying regulatory processes have remained indefinite. Here, we analyzed the impact of Si on nutritional, metabolic and transcriptional responses in roots and shoots of barley subjected to potassium (K) deficiency. On the long run, Si nutrition improved root and shoot growth as well as metabolite homeostasis and partly reverted the K deficiency signature of the transcriptome back to adequate only in fully expanded leaves but hardly in roots. In the short term, Si supply to K-starved roots enhanced first the expression of the vacuolar K exporter KCO1 together with root-to-shoot translocation rates of rubidium (Rb) that was used as tracer for K. The typical K deficiency response, marked by upregulation of the K importer genes HAK1 and AKT1, set in a few days later but then at several-fold higher levels. Lower root K and higher shoot K contents in Si-supplied plants indicated more efficient remobilization of root K pools and higher root-to-shoot translocation, which on the long run restored K-dependent metabolic processes in shoots for the sake of continued assimilate provision to roots. These results provide a sequence of physiological processes by which Si partially recovers plants from K deficiency and indicate that Si interferes with systemic K deficiency signaling in roots to alter the regulation of K transporters.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available