Maize zinc uptake is influenced by arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis under various soil phosphorus availabilities

Author:

Yu Baogang123ORCID,Zhou Chengxiang1ORCID,Wang Zhonghua4ORCID,Bucher Marcel56ORCID,Schaaf Gabriel7ORCID,Sawers Ruairidh J. H.8ORCID,Chen Xinping9ORCID,Hochholdinger Frank3ORCID,Zou Chunqin1ORCID,Yu Peng23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Nutrient Use and Management, College of Resources and Environmental Sciences China Agricultural University 100193 Beijing China

2. Emmy Noether Group Root Functional Biology, Institute of Crop Science and Resource Conservation University of Bonn 53113 Bonn Germany

3. Crop Functional Genomics, Institute of Crop Science and Resource Conservation University of Bonn 53113 Bonn Germany

4. National Engineering Research Center of Wheat and Maize, Maize Research Institute Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences 250100 Jinan China

5. Institute for Plant Sciences, Cologne Biocenter University of Cologne 50674 Cologne Germany

6. Cluster of Excellence on Plant Sciences University of Cologne 50674 Cologne Germany

7. Plant Nutrition, Institute of Crop Science and Resource Conservation University of Bonn 53115 Bonn Germany

8. Department of Plant Science Pennsylvania State University State College PA 16802 USA

9. College of Resources and Environment, and Academy of Agricultural Sciences Southwest University 400715 Chongqing China

Abstract

Summary The antagonistic interplay between phosphorus (P) and zinc (Zn) in plants is well established. However, the molecular mechanisms mediating those interactions as influenced by arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis remain unclear. We investigated Zn concentrations, root AM symbiosis, and transcriptome profiles of maize roots grown under field conditions upon different P levels. We also validated genotype‐dependent P–Zn uptake in selected genotypes from a MAGIC population and conducted mycorrhizal inoculation experiments using mycorrhizal‐defective mutant pht1;6 to elucidate the significance of AM symbiosis in P–Zn antagonism. Finally, we assessed how P supply affects Zn transporters and Zn uptake in extraradical hyphae within a three‐compartment system. Elevated P levels led to a significant reduction in maize Zn concentration across the population, correlating with a marked decline in AM symbiosis, thus elucidating the P–Zn antagonism. We also identified ZmPht1;6 is crucial for AM symbiosis and confirmed that P–Zn antagonistic uptake is dependent on AM symbiosis. Moreover, we found that high P suppressed the expression of the fungal RiZRT1 and RiZnT1 genes, potentially impacting hyphal Zn uptake. We conclude that high P exerts systemic regulation over root and AM hyphae‐mediated Zn uptake in maize. These findings hold implications for breeding Zn deficiency‐tolerant maize varieties.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

China Scholarship Council

U.S. Department of Agriculture

Publisher

Wiley

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