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Zinc hyperaccumulation in Thlaspi caerulescens. II. Influence on organic acids

Zinc hyperaccumulation in Thlaspi caerulescens. II. Influence on organic acids Abstract The influence of different zinc (Zn) concentrations (1.5 to 1500 μM) on organic acid levels in roots and shoots of the Zn‐hyperaccumulator plant Thlaspi caerulescens was investigated. In shoots, malate was the most abundant organic acid (164 to 248 μmol/g f.w.), followed by citrate, succinate, and oxalate. A significant correlation between soluble Zn and both malate and oxalate was observed in shoots, but not in roots. In shoots, a significant correlation between inorganic cation equivalents and organic acid anion equivalents was found. These observations and the finding, that organic acid concentrations were high even under suboptimal Zn supply (1.5 μM) suggest that in T. caerulescens the high organic acid concentration in shoots is a constitutive property. The variation of the organic acid concentrations seem to be a consequence of the cation‐anion balance rather than a specific Zn tolerance mechanism. The constitutively high organic acid concentration may be responsible for the high Zn and iron (Fe) tissue concentrations required for optimum growth in T. caerulescens. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Plant Nutrition Taylor & Francis

Zinc hyperaccumulation in Thlaspi caerulescens. II. Influence on organic acids

Zinc hyperaccumulation in Thlaspi caerulescens. II. Influence on organic acids

Journal of Plant Nutrition , Volume 19 (12): 10 – Dec 1, 1996

Abstract

Abstract The influence of different zinc (Zn) concentrations (1.5 to 1500 μM) on organic acid levels in roots and shoots of the Zn‐hyperaccumulator plant Thlaspi caerulescens was investigated. In shoots, malate was the most abundant organic acid (164 to 248 μmol/g f.w.), followed by citrate, succinate, and oxalate. A significant correlation between soluble Zn and both malate and oxalate was observed in shoots, but not in roots. In shoots, a significant correlation between inorganic cation equivalents and organic acid anion equivalents was found. These observations and the finding, that organic acid concentrations were high even under suboptimal Zn supply (1.5 μM) suggest that in T. caerulescens the high organic acid concentration in shoots is a constitutive property. The variation of the organic acid concentrations seem to be a consequence of the cation‐anion balance rather than a specific Zn tolerance mechanism. The constitutively high organic acid concentration may be responsible for the high Zn and iron (Fe) tissue concentrations required for optimum growth in T. caerulescens.

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References (15)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
ISSN
1532-4087
eISSN
0190-4167
DOI
10.1080/01904169609365220
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Abstract The influence of different zinc (Zn) concentrations (1.5 to 1500 μM) on organic acid levels in roots and shoots of the Zn‐hyperaccumulator plant Thlaspi caerulescens was investigated. In shoots, malate was the most abundant organic acid (164 to 248 μmol/g f.w.), followed by citrate, succinate, and oxalate. A significant correlation between soluble Zn and both malate and oxalate was observed in shoots, but not in roots. In shoots, a significant correlation between inorganic cation equivalents and organic acid anion equivalents was found. These observations and the finding, that organic acid concentrations were high even under suboptimal Zn supply (1.5 μM) suggest that in T. caerulescens the high organic acid concentration in shoots is a constitutive property. The variation of the organic acid concentrations seem to be a consequence of the cation‐anion balance rather than a specific Zn tolerance mechanism. The constitutively high organic acid concentration may be responsible for the high Zn and iron (Fe) tissue concentrations required for optimum growth in T. caerulescens.

Journal

Journal of Plant NutritionTaylor & Francis

Published: Dec 1, 1996

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