4.7 Article

Trichome Biomineralization and Soil Chemistry in Brassicaceae from Mediterranean Ultramafic and Calcareous Soils

期刊

PLANTS-BASEL
卷 10, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10020377

关键词

biomineralization; Brassicaceae; calcium carbonate; calcium phosphate; energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy; metallophytes; nickel hyperaccumulators; plant trichomes; scanning electron-microscopy

资金

  1. University of Firenze
  2. Agronickel, a FACCE SURPLUS project
  3. H2020 ERA-NET Cofund

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigated trichome biomineralization in 36 species of Mediterranean Brassicaceae from ultramafic and calcareous soils. The research found that soil chemistry had limited influence on trichome biomineralization, with calcium carbonate being the dominant biomineral, followed by calcium phosphate and silica. The study also observed that hyperaccumulation of Ni or variations in Mg:Ca ratios in the soil did not significantly impact the chemical composition of trichome biominerals.
Trichome biomineralization is widespread in plants but detailed chemical patterns and a possible influence of soil chemistry are poorly known. We explored this issue by investigating trichome biomineralization in 36 species of Mediterranean Brassicaceae from ultramafic and calcareous soils. Our aims were to chemically characterize biomineralization of different taxa, including metallophytes, under natural conditions and to investigate whether divergent Ca, Mg, Si and P-levels in the soil are reflected in trichome biomineralization and whether the elevated heavy metal concentrations lead to their integration into the mineralized cell walls. Forty-two samples were collected in the wild while a total of 6 taxa were brought into cultivation and grown in ultramafic, calcareous and standard potting soils in order to investigate an effect of soil composition on biomineralization. The sampling included numerous known hyperaccumulators of Ni. EDX microanalysis showed CaCO3 to be the dominant biomineral, often associated with considerable proportions of Mg-independent of soil type and wild versus cultivated samples. Across 6 of the 9 genera studied, trichome tips were mineralized with calcium phosphate, in Bornmuellera emarginata the P to Ca-ratio was close to that of pure apatite-calcium phosphate (Ca-5(PO4)(3)OH). A few samples also showed biomineralization with Si, either only at the trichome tips or all over the trichome. Additionally, we found traces of Mn co-localized with calcium phosphate in Bornmuellera emarginata and traces of Ni were detected in trichomes of the Ni-hyperaccumulator Odontarrhena chalcidica. Our data from wild and cultivated plants could not confirm any major effect of soil chemistry on the chemistry of trichome biominerals. Hyperaccumulation of Ni in the plants is not mirrored in high levels of Ni in the trichomes, nor do we find large amounts of Mn. A comparison based on plants from cultivation (normal, calcareous and serpentine soils, Mg:Ca-ratios ca 1:2 to 1:20) shows at best a very weak reflection of different Mg:Ca-ratios in the mineralized trichomes. The plants studied seem to be able to maintain highly conserved biomineralization patterns across a wide range of soil chemistries.

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