Positron‐Emitting Tracer (PET) imaging of fluoride transport and distribution in tea plant

2020 
BACKGROUND: Tea (Camellia sinensis (L.) O. Kuntze) is a hyper-accumulator of fluoride (F). To understand F uptake and distribution in living plants, we visually evaluated the real-time transport of F absorbed by roots and leaves using a positron-emitting ((18) F) fluoride tracer and a positron-emitting tracer imaging system. RESULTS: F arrived at an aerial plant part about 1.5 h after absorption by roots, suggesting that tea roots had a retention effect on F, and then was transported upward mainly via the xylem and little via the phloem along the tea stem, but no F was observed in the leaves within the initial 8 h. F absorbed via a cut petiole (leaf 4) was mainly transported downward along the stem within the initial 2 h. Although F was first detected in the top and ipsilateral leaves, it was not detected in tea roots by the end of the monitoring. During the monitoring time, F principally accumulated in the node. CONCLUSION: F uptake by the petiole of excised leaf and root system was realized in different ways. The nodes indicated that they may play pivotal roles in the transport of F in tea plants. (c) 2020 Society of Chemical Industry.
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