A Review: Systemic Signaling in the Regulation of Plant Responses to Low N, P and Fe

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Abstract

Plant signal transduction occurs in response to nutrient element deficiency in plant vascular tissue. Recent works have shown that the vascular tissue is a central regulator in plant growth and development by transporting both essential nutritional and long-distance signaling molecules between different parts of the plant’s tissues. Split-root and grafting studies have deciphered the importance of plants’ shoots in receiving root-derived nutrient starvation signals from the roots. This review assesses recent studies about vascular tissue, integrating local and systemic long-distance signal transduction and the physiological regulation center. A substantial number of studies have shown that the vascular tissue is a key component of root-derived signal transduction networks and is a regulative center involved in plant elementary nutritional deficiency, including nitrogen (N), phosphate (P), and iron (Fe).

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Geng, Z., Chen, J., Lu, B., Zhang, F., Chen, Z., Liu, Y., … Xu, C. (2023, August 1). A Review: Systemic Signaling in the Regulation of Plant Responses to Low N, P and Fe. Plants. Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI). https://doi.org/10.3390/plants12152765

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