4.7 Article

Exogenous Melatonin Improves Plant Iron Deficiency Tolerance via Increased Accumulation of Polyamine-Mediated Nitric Oxide

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms17111777

Keywords

melatonin; iron deficiency; polyamine; nitric oxide (NO); iron remobilization

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31370214, 31600210]
  2. Research Foundation of Ministry of Agriculture [BOFC2015KB02]
  3. National Sparking Plan Project [2015GA710013, 2015GA710014]
  4. Key Research Project of the Anhui Science and Technology Committee [1301032151, 15CZZ03102]
  5. Natural Science Foundation of Anhui Province [1508085QD74, 1608085MC59]
  6. Public Technological Application Project of the Anhui Science and Technology Committee [1604f0704045]
  7. Research Foundation of Anhui Science and Technology University [ZRC2014403]

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Melatonin has recently been demonstrated to play important roles in the regulation of plant growth, development, and abiotic and biotic stress responses. However, the possible involvement of melatonin in Fe deficiency responses and the underlying mechanisms remained elusive in Arabidopsis thaliana. In this study, Fe deficiency quickly induced melatonin synthesis in Arabidopsis plants. Exogenous melatonin significantly increased the soluble Fe content of shoots and roots, and decreased the levels of root cell wall Fe bound to pectin and hemicellulose, thus alleviating Fe deficiency-induced chlorosis. Intriguingly, melatonin treatments induced a significant increase of nitric oxide (NO) accumulation in roots of Fe-deficient plants, but not in those of polyamine-deficient (adc2-1 and D-arginine-treated) plants. Moreover, the melatonin-alleviated leaf chlorosis was blocked in the polyamine-and NO-deficient (nia1nia2noa1 and c-PTIO-treated) plants, and the melatonin-induced Fe remobilization was largely inhibited. In addition, the expression of some Fe acquisition-related genes, including FIT1, FRO2, and IRT1 were significantly up-regulated by melatonin treatments, whereas the enhanced expression of these genes was obviously suppressed in the polyamine-and NO-deficient plants. Collectively, our results provide evidence to support the view that melatonin can increase the tolerance of plants to Fe deficiency in a process dependent on the polyamine-induced NO production under Fe-deficient conditions.

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