Root-microbial effects on plant iron uptake from siderophores and phytosiderophores |
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Authors: | David E. Crowley Volker Römheld Horst Marschner Paul J. Szaniszlo |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Microbiology, University of Texas at Austin, 78712 Austin, TX, USA;(2) Institute of Plant Nutrition, University of Hohenheim, P.O. Box 700562, DW-7000 Stuttgart 70, Germany;(3) Present address: Department of Soil and Environmental Sciences, University of California, 92521 Riverside, CA, USA |
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Abstract: | Collaborative experiments were conducted to determine whether microbial populations associated with plant roots may artifactually affect the rates of Fe uptake and translocation from microbial siderophores and phytosiderophores. Results showed nonaxenic maize to have 2 to 34-fold higher Fe-uptake rates than axenically grown plants when supplied with 1 μM Fe as either the microbial siderophore, ferrioxamine B (FOB), or the barley phytosiderophore, epi-hydroxymugineic acid (HMA). In experiments with nonsterile plants, inoculation of maize or oat seedlings with soil microorganisms and amendment of the hydroponic nutrient solutions with sucrose resulted in an 8-fold increase in FOB-mediated Fe-uptake rates by Fe-stressed maize and a 150-fold increase in FOB iron uptake rates by Fe-stressed oat, but had no effect on iron uptake by Fe-sufficient plants. Conversely, Fe-stressed maize and oat plants supplied with HMA showed decreased uptake and translocation in response to microbial inoculation and sucrose amendment. The ability of root-associated microorganisms to affect Fe-uptake rates from siderophores and phytosiderophores, even in short-term uptake experiments, indicates that microorganisms can be an unpredictable confounding factor in experiments examining mechanisms for utilization of microbial siderophores or phytosiderophores under nonsterile conditions. |
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Keywords: | chelate iron maize nutrition oat phytosiderophores siderophores trace metal |
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