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PLANT PHYSIOLOGY , Vol 111, Issue 4 1119-1125, Copyright © 1996 by American Society of Plant Biologists
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WHOLE PLANT, ENVIRONMENTAL, AND STRESS PHYSIOLOGY |
Roots of Iron-Efficient Maize also Absorb Phytosiderophore-Chelated Zinc
N. von Wiren, H. Marschner and V. Romheld
Institut fur Pflanzenernahrung (330), Universitat Hohenheim, D-70593 Stuttgart, Germany
To investigate the recognition of Zn-phytosiderophores by the putative
Fe-phytosiderophore transporter in maize (Zea mays L.) roots, short-term
uptake of 65Zn-labeled phytosiderophores was compared in the Fe-efficient
maize cultivar Alice and the maize mutant ys1 carrying a defect in
Fe-phytosiderophore uptake. In ys1, uptake and translocation rates of Zn
from Zn-phytosiderophores were one-half of those in Alice, but no
genotypical difference was found in Zn uptake and translocation from other
Zn-binding forms. In ys1 and in tendency also in Alice, Zn uptake decreased
with increasing stability constant of the chelate in the order: ZnSO4
[greater than or equal to] Zn-desferrioxamine > Zn-phytosiderophores
> Zn-EDTA. Adding a 500-fold excess of free phytosiderophores over Zn to
the uptake solution depressed Zn uptake in ys1 almost completely. In uptake
studies with double-labeled 65Zn-14C-phytosiderophores, ys1 absorbed the
phytosiderophore at similar rates when supplied as a Zn-chelate or the free
ligand. By contrast, in Alice 14C-phytosiderophore uptake from the
Zn-chelate was 2.8-fold higher than from the free ligand, suggesting that
Alice absorbed the complete Zn-phytosiderophore complex via the putative
plasma membrane transporter for Fe-phytosiderophores. We propose two
pathways for the uptake of Zn from Zn-phytosiderophores in grasses, one via
the transport of the free Zn cation and the other via the uptake of
nondissociated Zn-phytosiderophores.
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