Literature DB >> 18753287

Nitrate control of root hydraulic properties in plants: translating local information to whole plant response.

Anna Gorska1, Qing Ye, N Michele Holbrook, Maciej A Zwieniecki.   

Abstract

The sessile lifestyle of plants constrains their ability to acquire mobile nutrients such as nitrate. Whereas proliferation of roots might help in the longer term, nitrate-rich patches can shift rapidly with mass flow of water in the soil. A mechanism that allows roots to follow and capture this source of mobile nitrogen would be highly desirable. Here, we report that variation in nitrate concentration around roots induces an immediate alteration of root hydraulic properties such that water is preferentially absorbed from the nitrate-rich patch. Further, we show that this coupling between nitrate availability and water acquisition results from changes in cell membrane hydraulic properties and is directly related to intracellular nitrate concentrations. Split-root experiments in which nitrate was applied to a portion of the root system showed that the response is both localized and reversible, resulting in rapid changes in water uptake to the portions of the roots exposed to the nitrate-rich patch. At the same time, water uptake by roots not supplied with nitrate was reduced. We believe that the increase in root hydraulic conductance in one part causes a decline of water uptake in the other part due to a collapse in the water potential gradient driving uptake. The translation of local information, in this case nitrate concentration, into a hydraulic signal that can be transmitted rapidly throughout the plant and thus coordinate responses at the whole plant level, represents an unexpected, higher level physiological interaction that precedes the level of gene expression.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18753287      PMCID: PMC2556825          DOI: 10.1104/pp.108.122499

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Physiol        ISSN: 0032-0889            Impact factor:   8.340


  19 in total

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5.  The Arabidopsis NRT1.1 transporter participates in the signaling pathway triggering root colonization of nitrate-rich patches.

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Review 7.  Local and long-range signaling pathways regulating plant responses to nitrate.

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8.  Nitrate induction of root hydraulic conductivity in maize is not correlated with aquaporin expression.

Authors:  Anna Gorska; Anna Zwieniecka; N Michele Holbrook; Maciej A Zwieniecki
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6.  Nitrate induction of root hydraulic conductivity in maize is not correlated with aquaporin expression.

Authors:  Anna Gorska; Anna Zwieniecka; N Michele Holbrook; Maciej A Zwieniecki
Journal:  Planta       Date:  2008-08-05       Impact factor: 4.116

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10.  In low transpiring conditions, nitrate and water fluxes for growth of B. napus plantlets correlate with changes in BnNrt2.1 and BnNrt1.1 transporter expression.

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