Opposite metabolic responses of shoots and roots to drought
Article 2014 en
Authors
AG
Albert Gargallo‐Garriga
JS
Jordi Sardans
MP
Míriam Pérez‐Trujillo
Abstract
1 min read
Shoots and roots are autotrophic and heterotrophic organs of plants with different physiological functions. Do they have different metabolomes? Do their metabolisms respond differently to environmental changes such as drought? We used metabolomics and elemental analyses to answer these questions. First, we show that shoots and roots have different metabolomes and nutrient and elemental stoichiometries. Second, we show that the shoot metabolome is much more variable among species and seasons than is the root metabolome. Third, we show that the metabolic response of shoots to drought contrasts with that of roots; shoots decrease their growth metabolism (lower concentrations of sugars, amino acids, nucleosides, N, P, and K), and roots increase it in a mirrored response. Shoots are metabolically deactivated during drought to reduce the consumption of water and nutrients, whereas roots are metabolically activated to enhance the uptake of water and nutrients, together buffering the effects of drought, at least at the short term.
Albert Gargallo‐Garriga, Jordi Sardans, Míriam Pérez‐Trujillo, Michal Oravec, Otmar Urban, Anke Jentsch, Jüergen Kreyling, Carl Beierkuhnlein, Teodor Parella, Josep Penuelas
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