Litcius/Paper detail

Nutrient carriers at the heart of plant nutrition and sensing

Kevin Robe, Marie Barberon

2023Current Opinion in Plant Biology28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Plants require water and several essential nutrients for their development. The radial transport of nutrients from the soil to the root vasculature is achieved through a combination of three different pathways: apoplastic, symplastic, and transcellular. A common feature for these pathways is the requirement of carriers to transport nutrients across the plasma membrane. An efficient transport of nutrients across the root cell layers relies on a large number of carriers, each of them having their own substrate specificity, tissular and subcellular localization. Polarity is also emerging as a major feature allowing their function. Recent advances on radial transport of nutrients, especially carrier mediated nutrient transport will be discussed in this review, as well as the role of transporters as nutrient sensors.

Topics & Concepts

ApoplastNutrientBiologyTranscellularPlant nutritionParacellular transportCell biologyBiophysicsBotanyMembraneBiochemistryCell wallEcologyPermeability (electromagnetism)Plant nutrient uptake and metabolismPlant Molecular Biology ResearchPlant Micronutrient Interactions and Effects