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Phosphorus (P) is a non-renewable resource that limits plant productivity due to its low bioavailability in the soil. Large amounts of P fertilizer are required to sustain high yields, which is both inefficient and hazardous to the environment. Plants have evolved various adaptive responses to cope with low external P availability, including mobilizing cellular P through phosphate (Pi) transporters and recycling Pi from P-containing biomolecules to maintain cellular P homeostasis. This mini-review summarizes the current research on intracellular P recycling and mobilization in response to P availability. We introduce the roles of Pi transporters and the P metabolic enzymes and expand on their gene regulation and mechanisms. The relevance of these processes in the search for targets to improve phosphorus use efficiency and some of the current challenges and gaps in our understanding of P starvation responses are discussed.
Calcium ions (Ca2+) play pivotal roles in a host of cellular signalling processes. The requirement to maintain resting cytosolic Ca2+ levels in the 100–200 nM range provides a baseline for dynamic excursions from resting levels that determine the nature of many physiological responses to external stimuli and developmental processes. This review provides an overview of the key components of the Ca2+ homeostatic machinery, including known channel-mediated Ca2+ entry pathways along with transporters that act to shape the cytosolic Ca2+ signature. The relative roles of the vacuole and endoplasmic reticulum as sources or sinks for cytosolic Ca2+ are considered, highlighting significant gaps in our understanding. The components contributing to mitochondrial, chloroplast and nuclear Ca2+ homeostasis and organellar Ca2+ signals are also considered. Taken together, a complex picture of the cellular Ca2+ homeostatic machinery emerges with some clear differences from mechanisms operating in many animal cells.
Silicon (Si), the most abundant mineral element in soil, functions as a beneficial element for plant growth. Higher Si accumulation in the shoots is required for high and stable production of rice, a typical Si-accumulating plant species. During the last two decades, great progresses has been made in the identification of Si transporters involved in uptake, xylem loading and unloading as well as preferential distribution and deposition of Si in rice. In addition to these transporters, simulation by mathematical models revealed several other key factors required for efficient uptake and distribution of Si. The expression of Lsi1, Lsi2 and Lsi3 genes is down-regulated by Si deposition in the shoots rather than in the roots, but the exact mechanisms underlying this down-regulation are still unknown. In this short review, we focus on Si transporters identified in rice and discuss how rice optimizes Si accumulation (“homeostasis”) through regulating Si transporters in response to the fluctuations of this element in the soil solution.