| Literature DB >> 33944939 |
Cui Li1, Jingtao Wu2, F Pax C Blamey2, Linlin Wang1, Lina Zhou1, David J Paterson3, Antony van der Ent2, Victoria Fernández4, Enzo Lombi5, Yuheng Wang1, Peter M Kopittke2.
Abstract
Trichomes are potentially important for absorption of foliar fertilizers. A study has shown that the non-glandular trichromes (NGTs) of sunflower (Helianthus annuus) accumulated high concentrations of foliar-applied zinc (Zn); however, the mechanisms of Zn accumulation in the NGTs and the fate of this Zn are unclear. Here we investigated how foliar-applied Zn accumulates in the NGTs and the subsequent translocation of this Zn. Time-resolved synchrotron-based X-ray fluorescence microscopy and transcriptional analyses were used to probe the movement of Zn in the NGTs, with the cuticle composition of the NGTs examined using confocal Raman microscopy. The accumulation of Zn in the NGTs is both an initial preferential absorption process and a subsequent translocation process. This preferred absorption is likely because the NGT base has a higher hydrophilicity, whilst the subsequent translocation is due to the presence of plasmodesmata, Zn-chelating ligands, and Zn transporters in the NGTs. Furthermore, the Zn sequestered in the NGTs was eventually translocated out of the trichome once the leaf Zn concentration had decreased, suggesting that the NGTs are also important in maintaining leaf Zn homeostasis. This study demonstrates for the first time that trichomes have a key structural and functional role in the absorption and translocation of foliar-applied Zn.Entities:
Keywords: Foliar absorption; foliar fertilizers; sunflower; translocation; trichome; zinc
Year: 2021 PMID: 33944939 DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erab180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Bot ISSN: 0022-0957 Impact factor: 6.992