Tolerance of high phosphorus concentrations in Ptilotus exaltatus
depends on the accumulation of phosphorus and calcium in different leaf
cells
Abstract
Under very high phosphorus (P) supply, Ptilotus hyperaccumulates P
without toxicity while Kennedia is intolerant. What physiological
mechanisms underlie this difference? P. exaltatus and K. prostrata were
grown in sandy soil with low- and high-P treatments. Under high P, both
species hyperaccumulated P (>20 mg g–1) in leaves, and
shoot dry weight was unchanged for P. exaltatus but decreased by
>50% for K. prostrata. Under high P, both species
preferentially accumulated leaf P as inorganic P but P. exaltatus
preferentially allocated P to mesophyll cells and stored Ca as
occasional crystals in specific lower mesophyll cells separate from P,
while K. prostrata preferentially allocated P to epidermal and spongy
mesophyll cells and co-located P and Ca in palisade mesophyll cells.
Mesophyll cellular [P] correlated positively with potassium for both
species and negatively with sulfur for P. exaltatus. High P tolerance
arose from P and Ca allocation to different leaf cell types, formation
of Ca crystals, and enhanced K and decreased S accumulation to balance
high cellular [P]. Intolerance to high P arose from the co-location
of Ca and P in palisade mesophyll cells. This study advances the
understanding of leaf physiological mechanisms for high P tolerance in
plants.