Disguised Blessings: A Mechanistic Understanding of the Beneficial Outcomes Triggered by Partial K Replacement With Na in Two Eucalyptus Species Under Drought Stress.
Nikolas Souza Mateus, Antonio Leite Florentino, Gabriel Luis Lima Soares Moreira, Marina Lima Nogueira, Maria Eduarda Pena Ferreira, Monica Lanzoni Rossi, Francisco Scaglia Linhares, Jose Lavres
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
While not essential for most plants, sodium (Na+) can partially substitute for potassium (K+) in some metabolic functions. Thus, understanding the mechanisms underlying K+ and Na+ uptake, transport, utilization, and ion replacement is crucial to sustain forest production. A pot experiment was designed with 6 K/Na ratios (100/0, 85/15, 70/30, 55/45, 40/60, and 0/0%) and two water conditions (well-watered, W+; and water-stressed, W-) on two Eucalyptus species with contrasting drought tolerance. In a multi-level analysis, we measured morphological, nutritional, physiological, biochemical, molecular, and anatomical traits. Low to moderate K replacement with Na (85/15%-55/45%) provided partial and faster stomatal closure (lower δ13C), thereby enhancing plants' water status (WUE, RLWC, ΨPD, ΨMD), photosynthetic capacity (gs, E, A, Ci/Ca), photoprotection (NPQ, qP, ETR, Fv/FM, ΦPSII), and growth (height, collar diameter, LA, TDM) relative to exclusive K supply. The 70/30% K/Na replacement was defined as the ideal ratio, upregulating K+ and water uptake (overexpression of AKT1, PIP2;5, PIP2;7 and TIP1;3), maximizing enzymatic antioxidant performance and biomass production, and reducing oxidative stress. High K replacement with Na (40/60%) and K deficiency (0/0%) led to incomplete stomatal closure reduced water status, photosynthetic capacity, photoprotection, and growth, especially in the species with low drought tolerance.
期刊介绍:
Plant, Cell & Environment is a premier plant science journal, offering valuable insights into plant responses to their environment. Committed to publishing high-quality theoretical and experimental research, the journal covers a broad spectrum of factors, spanning from molecular to community levels. Researchers exploring various aspects of plant biology, physiology, and ecology contribute to the journal's comprehensive understanding of plant-environment interactions.