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Al-hyperaccumulator Vochysiaceae from the Brazilian Cerrado store aluminum in their chloroplasts without apparent damage
Authors:Leide Rovênia Miranda de Andrade  Leila Maria Gomes BarrosGuillaume Fernandes Echevarria  Lourdes I Velho do AmaralMichelle G Cotta  Davi Rodrigo RossattoMundayatan Haridasan  Augusto César Franco
Institution:a Embrapa Cerrados, BR 020, Km 18, P.O. Box 08223, ZC 73301-970, Planaltina, DF, Brazil
b Embrapa Recursos Genéticos e Biotecnologia, Brasília, DF, Brazil
c Laboratoire Sols et Environnement, INRA, Nancy-Université, BP172, 54505 Vandœuvre-lès-Nancy, France
d Universidade de Brasília (UnB), Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, 70904-970, Brasília, DF, Brazil
Abstract:We investigated the pattern of aluminum (Al) accumulation in leaf tissues of native hyperaccumulator Vochysiaceae species Qualea grandiflora,Callisthene major, and Vochysia pyramidalis, from the Brazilian Cerrado. Non-accumulator Sclerolobium paniculatum was used as a control species. We expected a strong compartmentalization of Al in non-active leaf cell compartments such as cell walls and vacuoles in Al-accumulating species and the absence of Al in critical metabolic sites such as the chloroplasts. Plant leaves were harvested in the field and cut in small segments for histological analysis; hematoxylin dye was used for Al localization in tissues. Results of soil analysis of the three sites and the concentration of Al in leaves indicated that there is no direct relationship between Al availability in soils and Al hyperaccumulation among the Vochysiaceae species evaluated. The cross-sections of leaf tissues showed hematoxylin color in the palisade and spongy parenchyma cells (chloroplast) of Q. grandiflora and C. major. The vascular system of Q. grandiflora was not colored, but some cells from the xylem region of C. major were stained. In contrast, the adaxial and abaxial epidermal cells of V. pyramidalis were colored by hematoxylin, as were some cells from the vascular bundle, but color formation was not observed in the cells of palisade parenchyma. Al was not detected in leaves of S. paniculatum. We concluded that, although hyperaccumulation of Al is a common trait in the Vochysiaceae family, the processes of storage and detoxification in leaf tissues differ among the species. Two of the three hyperaccumulator species use chloroplasts as a sink for Al, with no apparent signs of toxicity. Therefore, the physiological role of Al in plant tissues remains to be elucidated.
Keywords:Aluminum accumulation  Calisthene major  Hematoxylin dye  Qualea grandiflora  Sclerolobium paniculatum  Vochysia pyramidalis
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