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Plant Physiol. (1998) 116: 447-453
UPDATE ON PHOSPHORUS UPTAKE
Phosphorus Uptake by Plants: From Soil to Cell
Daniel P. Schachtman*,
Robert J. Reid, and
S.M. Ayling
Departments of Botany (D.P.S., R.J.R.), and Soil Science (S.M.A.),
University of Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia
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INTRODUCTION |
P is an important plant macronutrient, making up
about 0.2% of a plant's dry weight. It is a component of key
molecules such as nucleic acids, phospholipids, and ATP, and,
consequently, plants cannot grow without a reliable supply of this
nutrient. Pi is also involved in controlling key enzyme reactions and
in the regulation of metabolic pathways (Theodorou and Plaxton, 1993 ).
After N, P is the second most frequently limiting macronutrient for
plant growth. This update focuses on P in soil and its uptake by
plants, transport across cell membranes, and compartmentation and
redistribution within the plant. We will concentrate on P in higher
plants, although broadly similar mechanisms have been shown to apply in
algae and fungi.
 |
P IN SOIL |
Although the total amount of P in the soil may be high, it is
often present in unavailable forms or in forms that are only available
outside of the rhizosphere. Few unfertilized soils release P fast
enough to support the high growth rates of crop plant species. In many
agricultural systems in which the application of P to the soil is
necessary to ensure plant productivity, the recovery of applied P by
crop plants in a growing season is very low, because in the soil more
than 80% of the P becomes immobile and unavailable for plant uptake
because of adsorption, precipitation, or conversion to the organic form
(Holford, 1997 ).
Soil P is found in different pools, such as organic and mineral P (Fig.
1). It is important to emphasize that
20 to 80% of P in soils is found in the organic form, of which phytic
acid (inositol hexaphosphate) is usually a major component (Richardson, 1994 ). The remainder is found in the inorganic fraction containing 170 mineral forms of P (Holford, 1997 ). Soil microbes release immobile
forms of P to the soil solution and are also responsible for the
immobilization of P. The low availability of P in the bulk soil limits
plant uptake. More soluble minerals such as K move through the soil via
bulk flow and diffusion, but P is moved mainly by diffusion. Since the
rate of diffusion of P is slow (10 12 to
10 15 m2 s 1), high plant uptake rates create a zone
around the root that is depleted of P.
Plant root geometry and morphology are important for maximizing P
uptake, because root systems that have higher ratios of surface area to
volume will more effectively explore a larger volume of soil
(Lynch, 1995 ). For this reason mycorrhizae are also important for plant
P acquisition, since fungal hyphae greatly increase the volume of soil
that plant roots explore (Smith and Read, 1997 ). In certain plant
species, root clusters (proteoid roots) are formed in response to P
limitations. These specialized roots exude high amounts of organic
acids (up to 23% of net photosynthesis), which acidify the soil and
chelate metal ions around the roots, resulting in the mobilization of P
and some micronutrients (Marschner, 1995 ).
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Pi UPTAKE ACROSS THE PLASMA MEMBRANE AND TONOPLAST |
The uptake of P poses a problem for plants, since the
concentration of this mineral in the soil solution is low but plant requirements are high. The form of P most readily accessed by plants is
Pi, the concentration of which rarely exceeds 10 µm in
soil solutions (Bieleski, 1973 ). Therefore, plants must have specialized transporters at the root/soil interface for extraction of
Pi from solutions of micromolar concentrations, as well as other
mechanisms for transporting Pi across membranes between intracellular
compartments, where the concentrations of Pi may be 1000-fold higher
than in the external solution. There must also be efflux systems that
play a role in the redistribution of this precious resource when soil P
is no longer available or adequate.
The form in which Pi exists in solution changes according to pH. The
pKs for the dissociation of
H3PO4 into
H2PO4
and then into HPO42 are 2.1 and 7.2, respectively. Therefore, below pH 6.0, most Pi will be present
as the monovalent
H2PO4
species, whereas H3PO4 and
HPO42 will be present only in
minor proportions. Most studies on the pH dependence of Pi uptake in
higher plants have found that uptake rates are highest between pH 5.0 and 6.0, where
H2PO4
dominates (Ullrich-Eberius et al., 1984 : Furihata et al., 1992 ), which
suggests that Pi is taken up as the monovalent form.
Under normal physiological conditions there is a requirement for
energized transport of Pi across the plasma membrane from the soil to
the plant because of the relatively high concentration of Pi in the
cytoplasm and the negative membrane potential that is characteristic of
plant cells. This energy requirement for Pi uptake is demonstrated by
the effects of metabolic inhibitors, which rapidly reduce Pi uptake.
The precise mechanics of membrane transport are still not clear,
although cotransport of Pi with one or more protons is the favored
option based on the following observations.
The addition of Pi to starved roots results in both
depolarization of the plasma membrane and acidification of the
cytoplasm (Ullrich and Novacky, 1990 ). The depolarization indicates
that Pi does not enter simply as
H2PO4 or
HPO42 , both of which would
lead to membrane hyperpolarization. From these results it is likely
that Pi is co-transported with positively charged ions. Cotransport of
Pi with a cation involving a stoichiometry of more than 1 C+/H2PO4
or more than 2 C+/HPO42
would result in a net influx of positive charge and hence lead to the
observed membrane depolarization. The cytoplasmic acidification associated with Pi transport would suggest that the cation is H+, but acidification would occur regardless of
the nature of the cation if the transported species were
H2PO4 ,
since it would undergo a pH-dependent dissociation in the cytoplasm to
HPO42 and
H+. To verify H+
cotransport requires simultaneous or at least comparable measurements of Pi influx and the change induced in cytoplasmic pH. Estimates of the
cytoplasmic buffering capacity would then allow calculation of the
Pi-associated H+ flux, from which the
stoichiometry could be deduced.
Pi uptake across the plasma membrane in animal cells normally involves
cotransport with Na+. Na-energized, high-affinity
Pi uptake systems have also been found in cyanobacteria and green
algae. In some organisms, such as Saccharomyces
cerevisiae, both Na+- and
H+-dependent Pi uptake systems have been
described (Roomans et al., 1977 ). Dependence of Pi uptake on
Na+ has not yet been demonstrated in higher
plants, but this may be partly because few studies have actually tested
this possible mode of energized Pi uptake.
Transfer of Pi from the cytoplasm to the vacuole involves a
different set of thermodynamic parameters to those applying to the
plasma membrane, mainly because of the millimolar concentrations in the
cytoplasm and vacuole compared with the micromolar
concentrations in the soil. Few estimates of cytosolic and
vacuolar Pi concentrations are available. However, when maize was grown
at Pi concentrations similar to those found in soils (i.e. 10 µm), the root cell cytoplasmic Pi concentration was
estimated to be higher than the vacuolar concentration (Lee and
Ratcliffe, 1993 ). Soybean leaf cell cytoplasmic Pi concentrations were
also found to be higher than concentrations in the vacuole when plants
were grown in solutions containing 50 to 100 µm Pi (Lauer
et al., 1989 ). Since the membrane potential of the vacuole is usually
slightly positive with respect to the cytoplasm under these realistic
conditions, Pi transfer to the vacuole need not be energized.
In plants supplied with higher concentrations of P, Pi appears
to be close to electrochemical equilibrium across the tonoplast. In one
of the few studies in which tonoplast transport has been examined, Pi
uptake into vacuoles isolated from P-sufficient barley leaves was shown
to follow a monophasic, almost linear concentration dependence up to at
least 20 mm, and was independent of ATP supply (Mimura et
al., 1990 ). However, in vacuoles isolated from Pi-starved cells, Pi
uptake rates were found to be much higher and ATP dependent, despite
the fact that the lower Pi concentrations in the vacuoles would favor
passive Pi accumulation. This suggests the de-repression or activation
of a second transporter in the tonoplast in response to Pi starvation.
The concentration dependence of Pi uptake in vacuoles from Pi-starved
cells has not been reported; a biphasic response would support the
presence of a second transporter that might play an important role in
maintaining Pi homeostasis when the Pi supply is limited. The process
of vacuolar Pi mobilization following Pi starvation is likely to
require energy-dependent transport across the tonoplast, the mechanism
of which is not understood, although an
H+/H2PO4
symport would be thermodynamically feasible. There is clearly a great
deal more to understand about the specific mechanisms of vacuolar Pi
transport in higher plants and the role these mechanisms play in
buffering cytoplasmic Pi concentration.
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MULTIPLE Pi TRANSPORTERS |
The question of whether there are several Pi transporters with
different functional characteristics in plant cell membranes or only one transporter with characteristics that vary with internal Pi
status or external concentration has been addressed using kinetic analysis of uptake. In this type of analysis a transporter's affinity (Km) for a particular mineral is estimated
by measuring the rate of uptake at different external concentrations of
an ion. Results from kinetic studies have been variously interpreted to
support the existence of only one uptake system in barley roots (Drew and Saker, 1984 ) or up to seven in maize roots (Nandi et al., 1987 ).
The most common interpretation of these kinetic studies is that two Pi
uptake systems exist, one with a high affinity and activity that is
either increased or de-repressed by Pi starvation, and one with a lower
affinity and activity that is constitutive. Estimates of the
Km for high-affinity uptake range from 3 to
7 µm, whereas for low-affinity transporters the
Km estimates are more variable, from 50 to
330 µm in several different tissues and plant species
(Ullrich-Eberius et al., 1984 ; McPharlin and Bieleski, 1987 ; Furihata
et al., 1992 ).
Recent advances in the molecular biology of putative plasma membrane
and tonoplast Pi transporters confirm that plants have multiple
transporters for Pi. Thus far, four different transporter genes have
been cloned from Arabidopsis, three from potato, and two from tomato.
Putative plasma membrane or tonoplast phosphate transporters in higher
plants were cloned by probing the database of translated expressed
sequence tags with fungal phosphate transporter peptide sequences. This
approach identified at least three expressed sequence tags from
randomly sequenced Arabidopsis cDNAs with translational products that
were similar to the fungal phosphate-transporter proteins. Using the
expressed sequence tags, full-length clones have been isolated from
cDNA and genomic libraries (Muchhal et al., 1996 ; Leggewie et al.,
1997 ; Smith et al., 1997 ). One putative phosphate transporter gene was
expressed in tobacco cells (Mitsukawa et al., 1997 ). High-affinity Pi
uptake was detected in the cells in which this gene was overexpressed,
demonstrating that at least one member of this gene family encodes a
high-affinity plasma membrane Pi transporter.
The proteins encoded by these genes contain large regions that are
identical to each other (Table I). The
gene family appears to be clustered in the Arabidopsis genome with at
least three members (APT1, APT2, and
AtPT4) mapping to a specific region of chromosome 5 (Lu
et al., 1997 ; Smith et al., 1997 ). These multiple Pi-transporter genes
are differentially expressed. Some are strongly up-regulated by Pi
starvation, whereas the expression of others is constitutive (Leggewie
et al., 1997 ). In the cases of APT1 and APT2, the
deduced amino acid sequences are 99% identical, which suggests that
the proteins have the same functional characteristics. Although these
proteins are almost identical, the promoter regions are completely
different and may contain specific information that controls the
spatial expression of these genes in different cell types, such as
epidermal or cortical cells in the roots.
A cDNA encoding a Pi transporter from potato, which is expressed in
roots under conditions of Pi starvation, was characterized in the
pho84 yeast mutant (Leggewie et al., 1997 ). The
Km for Pi uptake was 130 µm,
much higher than would be expected if it were involved in Pi uptake
from soils, where concentrations rarely exceed 10 µm.
Various reasons were suggested (Leggewie et al., 1997 ) for the high
Km values, but perhaps the most interesting is that phosphate transporters may contain a number of different protein subunits. The normal function of phosphate transporters may
require subunits that are absent when this plant cDNA is expressed in
yeast. Genetic evidence from Saccharomyces cerevisiae
indicates that several proteins containing putative membrane-spanning
domains may interact to form a Pi-transporter complex (Bun-ya et al., 1991 , 1996 ; Yompakdee et al., 1996 ). Although the association between
these proteins has not been directly demonstrated, and one protein
(Pho84) has been shown to be sufficient to catalyze phosphate transport
in proteoliposomes (Berhe et al., 1995 ), the genetic evidence supports
the idea that phosphate transporters are comprised of multiple
subunits.
In summary, kinetic and molecular data show that higher plants have
multiple transporters for Pi across cellular membranes. The molecular
data show that there are at least four genes that encode Pi
transporters, and the kinetic data suggests the presence of two types
of transporters with different affinities for Pi. The recent advances
in the molecular biology of these transporters provide powerful tools
for understanding how their function is integrated into plant
physiological processes. More work will be required to gain a
comprehensive picture of the location (cellular and subcellular) and
precise function of the multiple phosphate transporters in plants.
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COMPARTMENTATION OF P |
Maintenance of stable cytoplasmic Pi concentrations is
essential for many enzyme reactions. This homeostasis is
achieved by a combination of membrane transport and exchange between
various intracellular pools of P. These pools can be classified in a
number of different ways. First, according to their location in
physical compartments such as the cytoplasm, vacuole, apoplast, and
nucleus. The pH of these compartments will determine the form of Pi.
The second pKa for H3PO4 is
7.2, so Pi in the cytoplasm will be approximately equally partitioned
between the ionic forms
H2PO4
and HPO42 , whereas in the more
acidic vacuole and apoplast,
H2PO4
will be the dominant species. Second, by the chemical form of P, such
as Pi, P-esters, P-lipids, and nucleic acids. The proportion of the
total P in each chemical form (except P in DNA) changes with tissue
type and age and in response to P nutrition. Third, according to
physiological function, as metabolic, stored, and cycling forms.
Our knowledge of the distribution of P into metabolic pools
and physical compartments comes from three types of studies. Before 1980, information about P compounds and their distribution within tissues was derived from the analysis of isolated organelles or from
the partitioning of the radioactive tracer 32P
between different chemical fractions (Bieleski, 1973 ). Other information came from studies on the rate at which
32P is incorporated into or lost from tissues,
commonly referred to as compartmental analysis (Macklon et al., 1996 ).
A major advance in mapping intracellular pools came with the
application of NMR spectroscopy in plant tissues. This technique
allowed analysis in vivo of Pi and other important P-metabolites
(Ratcliffe, 1994 ), as well as the monitoring of time-dependent changes
in the amounts of these compounds. Figure
2 shows a typical
31P-NMR spectrum, such as is observed from
samples of root tips or suspension-cultured cells, and indicates where
the observed compounds are found within the cell.

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| Figure 2.
31P-NMR of carrot cells. The
assignments of the labeled resonances are: 1, several P-monoesters
including Glc-6-P and phosphocholine; 2, cytoplasmic Pi; 3, vacuolar
(vac) Pi; 4, -P of nucleoside triphosphates, principally ATP; 5, -P of NTPs; 6, NDP-hexose and NAD(P)H; 7, NDP-hexose; and 8, -P
of NTPs. (Spectrum redrawn from Carroll et al., 1994 .)
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Separate signals are detectable for Pi and other soluble-P compounds
located in the near-neutral cytoplasm or in the acidic vacuole (Fig.
2). 31P-NMR is at present the only way to measure
directly the cytoplasmic and vacuolar pools of Pi in vivo. In an NMR
spectrum the intensity of the resonances, reflected in the peak areas,
provides an immediate representation of the relative amounts of the
different soluble-P fractions present. The peak areas represent the
content of Pi from which concentrations can be derived (see Lee and
Ratcliffe, 1993 ). NMR studies confirmed that a small, rapidly turning
over pool of Pi (representing 1-5% of total Pi) is located in the
cytoplasm and a larger storage pool is located in the vacuole
(Ratcliffe, 1994 ). NMR studies have made a major contribution to our
knowledge of the behavior of the cytoplasmic and vacuolar pools of Pi
within the plant.
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REGULATION OF Pi UPTAKE |
Cytoplasmic Pi is maintained at constant concentrations (5-10
mm), more or less independently of external Pi
concentrations, except under severe P depletion (Lee et al., 1990 ; Lee
and Ratcliffe, 1993 ; Mimura, 1995 ). In contrast, vacuolar Pi
concentrations vary widely; under conditions of P starvation, vacuolar
Pi may be almost undetectable. Pi in the vacuole also increases more
readily than other P fractions in response to improved P status.
However, it does not seem to increase above about 25 mm
(Lee et al., 1990 ; Lee and Ratcliffe, 1993 ; Mimura, 1995 ).
When the supply of Pi is limited, plants grow more roots,
increase the rate of uptake by roots from the soil,
retranslocate Pi from older leaves, and deplete the vacuolar stores of
Pi. In addition, mycorrhizal fungi may more extensively colonize the roots. Conversely, when plants have an adequate supply of Pi and are
absorbing it at rates that exceed demand, a number of processes act to
prevent the accumulation of toxic Pi concentrations. These processes
include the conversion of Pi into organic storage compounds (e.g.
phytic acid), a reduction in the Pi uptake rate from the outside
solution (Lee et al., 1990 ), and Pi loss by efflux, which can be
between 8 and 70% of the influx (Bieleski and Ferguson, 1983 ). Any or
all of these processes may be strategies for the maintenance of
intracellular Pi homeostasis.
It is clear from both kinetic and molecular studies that the capacity
to transport Pi across cellular membranes involves several different
transporters and is in some way regulated by the external supply of Pi.
Furihata et al. (1992) showed differential expression of phosphate
transporters using kinetic techniques in which the high-affinity, but
not the low-affinity, system was repressed by high concentrations of
Pi. The expression of certain members of the putative plasma
membrane or tonoplast phosphate-transporter gene family increases
during periods of Pi starvation. In Arabidopsis at least three genes
encoding phosphate transporters are expressed in roots and are
up-regulated by Pi starvation. Similarly, in potato one gene was
specifically induced in roots and stolons by starving the plants of Pi,
whereas a second gene was expressed throughout the plant under
conditions of high or low phosphate.
Changes in Pi-transport activity and phosphate-transporter gene
expression show that plant cells respond to changes in the Pi
concentration of the external medium or in the vacuole. However, the
intracellular signals and the factors that modify gene expression in
the nucleus while cytoplasmic concentrations of Pi remain relatively constant are unknown. Progress at the molecular level may eventually provide insight into the processes that regulate phosphate uptake through the isolation of genes encoding proteins that interact and
regulate phosphate-transport mechanisms.
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P TRANSLOCATION IN WHOLE PLANT |
Recent studies (Mimura et al., 1996 ; Jeschke et al., 1997 )
provide a picture of patterns of Pi movement in whole plants.
In P-sufficient plants most of the Pi absorbed by the roots is
transported in the xylem to the younger leaves. Concentrations of Pi in
the xylem range from 1 mm in Pi-starved plants to 7 mm in plants grown in solutions containing 125 µm Pi (Mimura et al., 1996 ). There is also significant
retranslocation of Pi in the phloem from older leaves to the growing
shoots and from the shoots to the roots. In Pi-deficient plants the
restricted supply of Pi to the shoots from the roots via the xylem is
supplemented by increased mobilization of stored P in the older leaves
and retranslocation to both the younger leaves and growing roots.
This process involves both the depletion of Pi stores and the breakdown
of organic P in the older leaves. A curious feature of P-starved plants
is that approximately one-half of the Pi translocated from the shoots
to the roots in the phloem is then transferred to the xylem and
recycled back to the shoots (Jeschke et al., 1997 ). In the xylem P is
transported almost solely as Pi, whereas significant amounts of organic
P are found in the phloem.
A number of mutants that show altered Pi accumulation in
leaves have been identified. These may help us to understand the processes controlling the allocation of Pi within the plant. One Arabidopsis mutant (pho1) was isolated based on reduced
total phosphate concentrations in the leaf tissue (Poirier et al.,
1991 ) and was shown to have root Pi uptake rates that were the same as
the wild type, but reduced translocation rates to the shoot. In the
pho1 mutant, it is not known whether a gene encoding a transporter or regulatory molecule has been mutated; however, the
phosphate-transporter genes that have been cloned do not map to the
pho1 (or pho2) locus. This mutation highlights
the importance of specialized mechanisms for the transfer of Pi to the
xylem. Another Arabidopsis mutant, pho2, accumulates P in
its leaves to toxic concentrations, which is indicative of a defect in
the regulation of Pi concentrations in shoots (Delhaize and Randall, 1995 ) and illustrates the significance of regulating intracellular concentrations.
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MYCORRHIZAE IN P UPTAKE |
There is a general perception that Pi uptake by plants occurs as a
direct consequence of uptake from the soil by root cells. However, in
more than 90% of land plants, symbiotic associations are formed with
mycorrhizal fungi. In these plants the fungal hyphae play an important
role in the acquisition of P for the plant (Bolan, 1991 ; Smith and
Read, 1997 ). Mycorrhizae can be divided into two main categories:
ectomycorrhizae and endomycorrhizae, of which vesicular arbuscular
mycorrhizae are the most widespread in the plant kingdom (Smith and
Read, 1997 ). The mycorrhizal symbiosis is founded on the mutualistic
exchange of C from the plant in return for P and other mineral
nutrients from the fungus. Influx of P in roots colonized by
mycorrhizal fungi can be 3 to 5 times higher than in nonmycorrhizal
roots (rates of 10 11 mol
m 1 s 1; Smith and Read,
1997 ).
The few published studies of the kinetics of Pi uptake indicate that
mycorrhizal roots and isolated hyphae have P-uptake systems with
characteristics similar to those found in nonmycorrhizal roots and
other fungi (Thomson et al., 1990 ; Smith and Read, 1997 ). Germ tubes of
the vesicular arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Gigaspora margarita have two Pi-uptake systems
(Km 2-3 µm and
10,000-11,000 µm) (Thomson et al., 1990 ). A recent
molecular study (Harrison and van Buuren, 1995 ) identified the gene
GvPT, which encodes a high-affinity fungal phosphate
transporter (Km = 18 µm) in
external hyphae that is similar in both structure and function to
high-affinity transporters in plants (Table I).
A number of factors may contribute to the increased rate of Pi uptake
measured in mycorrhizal plants (Smith and Read, 1997 ). An extensive
network of hyphae extends from the root, enabling the plant to explore
a greater volume of soil, thereby overcoming limitations imposed by the
slow diffusion of Pi in the soil. Several studies have shown that
the depletion zone around plant roots, which is caused by plant
uptake and the immobile nature of Pi, is larger in mycorrhizal than in
nonmycorrhizal plants (Bolan, 1991 ). Mycorrhizal fungi may also be able
to scavenge Pi from the soil solution more effectively than other soil
fungi because C (which may be limiting in the soil) is provided to the
fungus by the plant. The plant/fungus association could therefore
enable the plant to compete more effectively with soil microorganisms for the limited amount of available soil Pi. Mycorrhizal fungi may also
be able to acquire P from organic sources that are not available
directly to the plant (e.g. phytic acid and nucleic acids)
(Jayachandran et al., 1992 ).
Little is known about the transport of P compounds within mycorrhizae
or the mechanism of P efflux from the fungus. Pi and organic P (such as
polyphosphate) could be carried within the fungus by cytoplasmic
streaming or by bulk flow to the plant root from external hyphae
located in the soil. The current view is that Pi is the major form
effluxed by the fungus across the interfacial membranes. However, there
is also evidence in higher plants that phosphocholine can be broken
down outside cells to release Pi. It is possible that phosphocholine is
also effluxed by the fungus to the plant; Pi would then be taken up by
the plant via an H+ cotransporter, as in
nonmycorrhizal roots. Since it is known that the phosphate transporter
cloned from Glomus versiforme (GvPT) is not
expressed in fungal structures inside the plant, it cannot be a
candidate for the fungal P efflux mechanism. Efflux of P must depend on
a different transporter of unknown structure.
The role of P in the regulation of symbiosis is still poorly
understood, in part because of conflicting experimental results. In mycorrhizal roots demand for P by the plant may regulate the activity of P transporters in the fungus, with efflux from the fungus
being the limiting step. However, NMR studies of ectomycorrhizal roots
of Pinus resinosa (MacFall et al., 1992 ) showed that
although there was an increase in polyphosphate P in mycorrhizal roots, the vacuolar Pi content of mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal roots was
similar. The mycorrhizal plants did not accumulate Pi in the vacuoles,
which suggests that the fungus (Hebeloma arenosa) may be
able to limit the efflux of P to the plant.
Mycorrhizal roots are able to take up Pi from solutions containing up
to 100 mm Pi (Smith and Read, 1997 ), concentrations far
above that likely to be encountered in the soil. High external Pi
concentrations (up to 16 mm) had little adverse effect on
germination and growth of germ tubes in the vesicular arbuscular
mycorrhizal fungus G. margarita (Tawaraya et al., 1996 ).
These results suggest that the low levels of colonization seen in
plants growing in soils with high P status may not be the result of
direct regulation of the activity of the fungus by soil Pi, but,
rather, that specific signals from the plant regulate the activity of
the fungus.
 |
CONCLUSIONS |
Considering that P is an essential and often limiting nutrient for
plant growth, it is surprising that many aspects of P uptake and
transport in plants are not thoroughly understood.
31P-NMR studies have provided a picture of where
Pi is distributed in a living cell, kinetic studies have elucidated the
general functional characteristics of plasma membrane and tonoplast Pi transporters, and molecular studies have confirmed the presence of
multiple genes encoding phosphate transporters that are differentially expressed. Perhaps the next important leap in our conceptual
understanding in this area will come from the integration of these
techniques to provide a comprehensive picture of the function of
phosphate transporters and how the control of their spatial and
temporal expression allows the plant to cope with changing
environmental conditions.
A final issue to raise is that the soil Pi concentration has often been
ignored by plant physiologists. It is common to find experiments in
which plants were grown in 1 mm Pi, which may be 100-fold
higher than the Pi concentrations plants encounter in agricultural or
natural ecosystems. To fully understand how plants acquire Pi from
soils and regulate internal Pi concentrations, future studies on Pi
uptake by plants must more closely mimic soil conditions, in which the
concentration of Pi is always low and soil microflora influence both
acquisition and mobilization.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author; e-mail
dschachtman{at}botany.adelaide.edu.au; fax
61-8-82-32-3297.
Received July 23, 1997;
accepted October 9, 1997.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Professors F.A. and S.E. Smith for their critical
comments and discussions. We apologize to the colleagues whose papers
were not directly cited because of space limitations.
 |
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