Despite the usually high abundance of iron (Fe) in soils, the low
solubility of Fe-bearing minerals restricts the
available Fe pools in most aerobic soils to levels that are far below those
required for microbial or plant growth.
To acquire the necessary amounts of Fe from the environment, organisms
have evolved mechanisms that enhance
the solubility and dissolution rate of Fe(iii) oxyhydroxides prevailing
in aerobic soils. Chemically, these
mechanisms are based on weakening of the Fe–O bond by reduction,
chelation and protonation. Physiologically,
two distinct and in all known cases mutually exclusive strategies can be
distinguished: the excretion of
siderophores capable of solubilizing external ferric Fe and subsequent
uptake of the ferric siderophore complex;
and reduction of Fe(iii) prior to uptake of the more soluble Fe2+
ion. With the exception of graminaceous species,
in which Fe uptake is based on the former mechanism, the latter strategy
is found in all cormophytes and certain
algae, yeast and bacteria. In higher plants, the increase in their capacity
to convert extracellular ferric to ferrous
Fe is part of a series of physiological and morphological events that act
in concert to achieve appropriate internal
levels of Fe. It is this amalgam of features that determines the Fe efficiency
of a species or cultivar that in turn
affects the yield of economically important plants and the natural distribution
of species. Adaptive changes to
limited Fe availability have been studied at the molecular, physiological
and whole-plant level. This review
summarises current knowledge of the components of reduction-based Fe uptake
in plants and presents an
integrated view of the present understanding of mechanisms that control
the rate and extent of Fe absorption by
roots.