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Boron uptake by the root cortex symplast of tomato and pea plants: evidence for low-boron-induced active transport

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2007
Authors
Savić, Jasna
Nikolic, Miroslav
Prodanović, Slaven
Roemheld, Volker
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
The objective of this research was to test the hypothesis of the existence of an active boron ( B) uptake into the cortical cells induced by low B supply. The uptake of B was characterised in two tomato ( Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) genotypes: B-efficient FER and B-inefficient mutant T3238. In addition, pea (Pisum sativum L.) was used as an anatomically appropriate model for obtaining intact root cortex. Time course uptake studies in tomato indicate that the B-inefficient mutant was defective by the absence of an active low-B-induced uptake system in the cortex. Pea roots showed up to 10-fold higher accumulation of B into the cortex symplast at low (0.5 mu M) external B supply in comparison to adequate B (10 mu M) supply. Also, low-B-induced uptake of B was strongly inhibited by 2,4-dinitrophenol, indicating a metabolic energy-derived active component of B uptake at low external supply. Uptake of B by the cortical cells of tomato and pea plants appears to be a combination of both pa...ssive and active components, with a passive component prevailing at higher external B. An active component of B uptake suppressed by either adequate or high B supply might indicate a downregulation of plasma membrane-associated B transporter(s) in root cortical cells.

Keywords:
boron / transport / root cortex / pea / tomato
Source:
Functional Plant Biology, 2007, 34, 12, 1130-1136
Publisher:
  • Csiro Publishing, Clayton

DOI: 10.1071/FP07175

ISSN: 1445-4408

PubMed: 32689443

WoS: 000251240500009

Scopus: 2-s2.0-36448949421
[ Google Scholar ]
6
5
URI
http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/189
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
Institution/Community
Institut za multidisciplinarna istraživanja
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Savić, Jasna
AU  - Nikolic, Miroslav
AU  - Prodanović, Slaven
AU  - Roemheld, Volker
PY  - 2007
UR  - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/189
AB  - The objective of this research was to test the hypothesis of the existence of an active boron ( B) uptake into the cortical cells induced by low B supply. The uptake of B was characterised in two tomato ( Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) genotypes: B-efficient FER and B-inefficient mutant T3238. In addition, pea (Pisum sativum L.) was used as an anatomically appropriate model for obtaining intact root cortex. Time course uptake studies in tomato indicate that the B-inefficient mutant was defective by the absence of an active low-B-induced uptake system in the cortex. Pea roots showed up to 10-fold higher accumulation of B into the cortex symplast at low (0.5 mu M) external B supply in comparison to adequate B (10 mu M) supply. Also, low-B-induced uptake of B was strongly inhibited by 2,4-dinitrophenol, indicating a metabolic energy-derived active component of B uptake at low external supply. Uptake of B by the cortical cells of tomato and pea plants appears to be a combination of both passive and active components, with a passive component prevailing at higher external B. An active component of B uptake suppressed by either adequate or high B supply might indicate a downregulation of plasma membrane-associated B transporter(s) in root cortical cells.
PB  - Csiro Publishing, Clayton
T2  - Functional Plant Biology
T1  - Boron uptake by the root cortex symplast of tomato and pea plants: evidence for low-boron-induced active transport
EP  - 1136
IS  - 12
SP  - 1130
VL  - 34
DO  - 10.1071/FP07175
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Savić, Jasna and Nikolic, Miroslav and Prodanović, Slaven and Roemheld, Volker",
year = "2007",
abstract = "The objective of this research was to test the hypothesis of the existence of an active boron ( B) uptake into the cortical cells induced by low B supply. The uptake of B was characterised in two tomato ( Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) genotypes: B-efficient FER and B-inefficient mutant T3238. In addition, pea (Pisum sativum L.) was used as an anatomically appropriate model for obtaining intact root cortex. Time course uptake studies in tomato indicate that the B-inefficient mutant was defective by the absence of an active low-B-induced uptake system in the cortex. Pea roots showed up to 10-fold higher accumulation of B into the cortex symplast at low (0.5 mu M) external B supply in comparison to adequate B (10 mu M) supply. Also, low-B-induced uptake of B was strongly inhibited by 2,4-dinitrophenol, indicating a metabolic energy-derived active component of B uptake at low external supply. Uptake of B by the cortical cells of tomato and pea plants appears to be a combination of both passive and active components, with a passive component prevailing at higher external B. An active component of B uptake suppressed by either adequate or high B supply might indicate a downregulation of plasma membrane-associated B transporter(s) in root cortical cells.",
publisher = "Csiro Publishing, Clayton",
journal = "Functional Plant Biology",
title = "Boron uptake by the root cortex symplast of tomato and pea plants: evidence for low-boron-induced active transport",
pages = "1136-1130",
number = "12",
volume = "34",
doi = "10.1071/FP07175"
}
Savić, J., Nikolic, M., Prodanović, S.,& Roemheld, V.. (2007). Boron uptake by the root cortex symplast of tomato and pea plants: evidence for low-boron-induced active transport. in Functional Plant Biology
Csiro Publishing, Clayton., 34(12), 1130-1136.
https://doi.org/10.1071/FP07175
Savić J, Nikolic M, Prodanović S, Roemheld V. Boron uptake by the root cortex symplast of tomato and pea plants: evidence for low-boron-induced active transport. in Functional Plant Biology. 2007;34(12):1130-1136.
doi:10.1071/FP07175 .
Savić, Jasna, Nikolic, Miroslav, Prodanović, Slaven, Roemheld, Volker, "Boron uptake by the root cortex symplast of tomato and pea plants: evidence for low-boron-induced active transport" in Functional Plant Biology, 34, no. 12 (2007):1130-1136,
https://doi.org/10.1071/FP07175 . .

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