Hanhan Qin , Xiuying Zhang , Ge Tian , Chunling Liu , Yue Xing , Ziquan Feng , Mengxue Lyu , Jingquan Liu , XinXiang Xu , Zhanling Zhu , Yuanmao Jiang , Shunfeng Ge
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Potassium (K) and magnesium (Mg) play analogous roles in regulating plant photosynthesis and carbon and nitrogen (C–N) metabolism. Based on this consensus, we hypothesize that appropriate Mg supplementation may alleviate growth inhibition under low K stress. We monitored morphological, physiological, and molecular changes in G935 apple plants under different K (0.1 and 6 mmol L−1) and Mg supply (3 and 6 mmol L−1) conditions. Low K stress caused changes in root and leaf structure, inhibited photosynthesis, and limited the root growth of the apple rootstock. Further study on Mg supplementation showed that it could promote the uptake of K+ and NO3− by upregulating the expression of K+ transporter proteins such as Arabidopsis K+ transporter 1 (MdAKT1), high-affinity K+ transporter 1 (MdHKT1), and potassium transporter 5 (MdPT5) and nitrate transporters such as nitrate transporter 1.1/1.2/2.1/2.4 (MdNRT 1.1/1.2/2.1/2.4). Mg promoted the translocation of 15N from roots to leaves and enhanced photosynthetic N utilization efficiency (PNUE) by increasing the proportion of photosynthetic N and alleviating photosynthetic restrictions. Furthermore, Mg supplementation improved the synthesis of photosynthates by enhancing the activities of sugar-metabolizing enzymes (Rubisco, SS, SPS, S6PDH). Mg also facilitated the transport of sucrose and sorbitol from leaves to roots by upregulating the expression of sucrose transporter 1.1/1.2/4.1/4.2 (MdSUT 1.1/1.2/4.1/4.2) and sorbitol transporter 1.1/1.2 (MdSOT 1.1/1.2). Overall, Mg effectively alleviated growth inhibition in apple rootstock plants under low K stress by facilitating the uptake of N and K uptake, optimizing nitrogen partitioning, enhancing nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) and PNUE, and promoting the photosynthate synthesis and translocation.
期刊介绍:
Plant Physiology and Biochemistry publishes original theoretical, experimental and technical contributions in the various fields of plant physiology (biochemistry, physiology, structure, genetics, plant-microbe interactions, etc.) at diverse levels of integration (molecular, subcellular, cellular, organ, whole plant, environmental). Opinions expressed in the journal are the sole responsibility of the authors and publication does not imply the editors'' agreement.
Manuscripts describing molecular-genetic and/or gene expression data that are not integrated with biochemical analysis and/or actual measurements of plant physiological processes are not suitable for PPB. Also "Omics" studies (transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics, etc.) reporting descriptive analysis without an element of functional validation assays, will not be considered. Similarly, applied agronomic or phytochemical studies that generate no new, fundamental insights in plant physiological and/or biochemical processes are not suitable for publication in PPB.
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