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Iron Nutrition in Plants: Towards a New Paradigm?

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants12020384

Keywords

Arabidopsis; bHLH; dicots; grass; iron homeostasis; transcription factor

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Iron is an essential micronutrient for plant growth and development. Plants have evolved two different strategies, Strategy I and Strategy II, to acquire iron from soils. Recent findings show that the choice of strategy is influenced by soil characteristics, such as pH and oxygen concentration. This review summarizes recent research on plant iron uptake and discusses its impact on our understanding of plant iron nutrition.
Iron (Fe) is an essential micronutrient for plant growth and development. Fe availability affects crops' productivity and the quality of their derived products and thus human nutrition. Fe is poorly available for plant use since it is mostly present in soils in the form of insoluble oxides/hydroxides, especially at neutral to alkaline pH. How plants cope with low-Fe conditions and acquire Fe from soil has been investigated for decades. Pioneering work highlighted that plants have evolved two different strategies to mine Fe from soils, the so-called Strategy I (Fe reduction strategy) and Strategy II (Fe chelation strategy). Strategy I is employed by non-grass species whereas graminaceous plants utilize Strategy II. Recently, it has emerged that these two strategies are not fully exclusive and that the mechanism used by plants for Fe uptake is directly shaped by the characteristics of the soil on which they grow (e.g., pH, oxygen concentration). In this review, recent findings on plant Fe uptake and the regulation of this process will be summarized and their impact on our understanding of plant Fe nutrition will be discussed.

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