Apoplastic histochemical features of plant root walls that may facilitate ion uptake and retention

Author:

Wu Di1,Li Linbao1,Li Chengdao1,Dun Bicheng1,Zhang Jun1,Li Ten2,Zhou Cunyu2,Tan Debao3,Yang Chaodong2,Huang Guiyun1,Zhang Xia2

Affiliation:

1. Rare Plants Research Institute of Yangtze River, China Three Gorges Corporation , Yichang , Hubei , 443000 , China

2. Engineering Research Center of Ecology and Agriculture Use of Wetland, Ministry of Education, and Hubei Key Laboratory of Waterlogging Disaster and Agricultural Use of Wetland, Yangtze University , Jingzhou , Hubei 434025 , China

3. Changjiang River Scientific Research Institute , Wuhan , Hubei 430010 , China

Abstract

Abstract We used brightfield and epifluorescence microscopy, as well as permeability tests, to investigate the apoplastic histochemical features of plant roots associated with ion hyperaccumulation, invasion, and tolerance of oligotrophic conditions. In hyperaccumulator species with a hypodermis (exodermis absent), ions penetrated the root apex, including the root cap. By contrast, in non-hyperaccumulator species possessing an exodermis, ions did not penetrate the root cap. In vivo, the lignified hypodermis blocked the entry of ions into the cortex, while root exodermis absorbed ions and restricted them to the cortex. The roots of the hyperaccumulators Pteris vittata and Cardamine hupingshanensis, as well as the aquatic invasives Alternanthera philoxeroides, Eichhornia crassipes, and Pistia stratiotes, contained lignin and pectins. These compounds may trap and store ions before hypodermis maturation, facilitating ion hyperaccumulation and retention in the apoplastic spaces of the roots. These apoplastic histochemical features were consistent with certain species-specific characters, including ion hyperaccumulation, invasive behaviors in aquatic environments, or tolerance of oligotrophic conditions. We suggest that apoplastic histochemical features of the root may act as invasion mechanisms, allowing these invasive aquatic plants to outcompete indigenous plants for ions.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Neuroscience

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