UPTAKE AND TRANSPORT OF ZINC IN ZINC-SENSITIVE AND ZINC-TOLERANT SILENE-VULGARIS

Citation
H. Harmens et al., UPTAKE AND TRANSPORT OF ZINC IN ZINC-SENSITIVE AND ZINC-TOLERANT SILENE-VULGARIS, Journal of plant physiology, 141(3), 1993, pp. 309-315
Citations number
42
Journal title
ISSN journal
01761617
Volume
141
Issue
3
Year of publication
1993
Pages
309 - 315
Database
ISI
SICI code
0176-1617(1993)141:3<309:UATOZI>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
The uptake and transport of zinc in zinc-sensitive and zinc-tolerant S ilene vulgaris were compared in a short-term experiment. Although the roots of tolerant plants contained more CaCl2-exchangeable zinc, toler ance can not result from exclusion through binding of zinc to the cell wall, because the total uptake of zinc was not significantly differen t between the populations. Compared at equal levels of zinc injury, me asured by root-length growth inhibition, the uptake of zinc was much h igher in the tolerant plants. Up to the NOEC for root-length growth of sensitive plants, an equal zinc concentration of the roots was found in sensitive and tolerant plants, but at a higher supply the zinc conc entration of the roots was higher in tolerant plants. In sensitive pla nts the zinc concentration of the shoot was higher than in tolerant on es, except after 3 and 7 days at the highest zinc supply, and the perc entage of zinc allocated to the shoot was higher at all external zinc concentrations. The results of a split-root experiment clearly show th at zinc has a direct inhibitory effect on root growth. Zinc tolerance seems to result from an efficient sequestration of zinc inside the roo t cells. This probably causes a lower transport of zinc to the shoot.