Plant Physiol. Illumina
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Plant Physiology 43:1309-1316 (1968)
© 1968 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Effect of Phosphorus Deficiency on Levels of Phosphorus Compounds in Spirodela

R. L. Bieleski

Fruit Research Division, Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, Auckland, New Zealand

When Spirodela plants are transferred to a phosphate-deficient medium, growth slows down immediately, and ceases after 14 days. During this time, inorganic phosphate content falls from 30 to 0.7 µmoles/g fresh weight of tissue, phosphate ester content from 3.5 to 0.6 µmoles/g, phospholipid content from 3.5 to 1.2 µmoles/g, and residual phosphate (mainly RNA) content from 7.5 to 2.0 µmoles/g. Relative proportions of the various phosphate esters, and relative proportions of the various phospholipids, are not markedly affected by phosphate deficiency. Turnover rates of phosphate esters are somewhat higher in phosphate-deficient tissue. In control tissue, inorganic phosphate is present in 2 pools; a metabolic (12%) and a non-metabolic pool (88%). In phosphate-deficient tissues, most of the inorganic phosphate (>90%) is in the metabolic pool. Non-metabolic phosphate is presumably stored in the vacuole, and is not readily accessible to the tissue, so that growth normally occurs at the expense of external phosphate. During deficiency, growth is limited by the rate at which phosphate can be transported through the tonoplast and tissue to the growing point. Growth ceases when the supply of non-metabolic phosphate is exhausted. Metabolic phosphate is presumably located in the cytoplasm: it can not be used for growth. Nor can the plant respond to deficiency by making some phosphorus compounds at the expense of others. In this respect, phosphorus deficiency and nitrogen deficiency are dissimilar.








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Copyright © 1968 by the American Society of Plant Biologists