| Literature DB >> 34040623 |
Suresh Kumar1, Santosh Kumar2, Trilochan Mohapatra3.
Abstract
Nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), sulfur (S), zinc (Zn), and iron (Fe) are some of the vital nutrients required for optimum growth, development, and productivity of plants. The deficiency of any of these nutrients may lead to defects in plant growth and decreased productivity. Plant responses to the deficiency of N, P, S, Fe, or Zn have been studied mainly as a separate event, and only a few reports discuss the molecular basis of biological interaction among the nutrients. Macro-nutrients like N, P, and/or S not only show the interacting pathways for each other but also affect micro-nutrient pathways. Limited reports are available on the investigation of two-by-two or multi-level nutrient interactions in plants. Such studies on the nutrient interaction pathways suggest that an MYB-like transcription factor, phosphate starvation response 1 (PHR1), acts as a master regulator of N, P, S, Fe, and Zn homeostasis. Similarly, light-responsive transcription factors were identified to be involved in modulating nutrient responses in Arabidopsis. This review focuses on the recent advances in our understanding of how plants coordinate the acquisition, transport, signaling, and interacting pathways for N, P, S, Fe, and Zn nutrition at the molecular level. Identification of the important candidate genes for interactions between N, P, S, Fe, and/or Zn metabolic pathways might be useful for the breeders to improve nutrient use efficiency and yield/quality of crop plants. Integrated studies on pathways interactions/cross-talks between macro- and micro-nutrients in the agronomically important crop plants would be essential for sustainable agriculture around the globe, particularly under the changing climatic conditions.Entities:
Keywords: P-Fe-Zn tripartite interaction; iron; nutrient homeostasis; nutrient interaction; nutrient pathways interaction; phosphorus; sulfur; zinc
Year: 2021 PMID: 34040623 PMCID: PMC8141648 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.665583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Figure 1Schematic representation of nitrogen-starvation response and phosphate-starvation responses explaining N/P interactions. PHR1 acts as a major transcriptional regulator of P-starvation response, which is accompanied by the activation of phosphate starvation-induced (PSI) genes followed by phosphate uptake and translocation by phosphate transporters (PHO1 and PHT1s). PHR1 is negatively regulated by SPXs through inositol polyphosphate (insP)-triggered Pathway. During P-starvation, PHR1 up-regulates the IPS1 and miR399 expression. miR399 represses PHO2, which acts in association with NLA (an E3 ligase) to repress/degrade PHO1 and PHT1. OsSPX4 is degraded through 26S proteasome pathway in response to N supply (+N) via the action of OsNRT1.1B and an E3 ligase OsNBIP1 (NRT1−NBIP). SPXs transcription is directly repressed in response to +N by NIGT1/HHOs. On the contrary, PHR is positively regulated by +N. PHO2 expression is down-regulated in response to +N by NIGT1/HHOs and CHL1/NRT1.1. Thus, the phosphate-starvation response is attenuated by N-starvation because of the accumulation of negative regulators (SPXs and PHO2) and a decrease in the positive regulator (PHR1).
Figure 2Schematic representation of the macro‐ and micro-nutrient homeostasis. The interactions between phosphorus (P), iron (Fe), sulfur (S), and zinc (Zn) homeostasis are indicated by ↔ arrows. At the molecular level, transcription factor PHR1 (initially identified as a key regulator of the phosphate-starvation induced genes) up-regulates phosphate transporters (PHT1;1), PHO1;H1, and the genes involved in phosphate deficiency sensing/signaling (SPX1, miR399, and miR827). Other genes known to be involved in P-deficiency signaling/sensing include miR827 and miR399. Transcriptional regulation of some of the genes involved in maintaining Fe and Zn homeostasis is PHR1-dependent; it includes FER1 (encoding Fe storage protein ferritin) and ZIP2 and ZIP4 (zinc transporters). PHR1 also acts as a central regulator of sulfate transport (SULTR1;3, SULTR2;1, and SULTR3;4). The arrow-heads and flat-ended lines indicate the positive and negative effects of PHR1, respectively. PHR1 acts as a regulator of P-transporters (PHT1 and PHO1) via the PHR1–miR399–PHO2 module. Also, ZIP2 and ZIP4 are activated by PHR1 binding to the P1BS sequences in the promoter of the genes. Likewise, Zn sufficiency inactivates the Zn-regulatory network and represses Zn transporters for Zn homeostasis. Besides, PHO1;H3 is repressed by sufficient Zn supply, and the PHR1 and PHO1 proteins help to maintain the Pi–Zn homeostasis cross-talk. Similarly, Fe homeostasis is also regulated in a PHR1-dependent manner.