Molecules (Aug 2020)

<sup>31</sup>P-NMR Metabolomics Revealed Species-Specific Use of Phosphorous in Trees of a French Guiana Rainforest

  • Albert Gargallo-Garriga,
  • Jordi Sardans,
  • Joan Llusià,
  • Guille Peguero,
  • Dolores Asensio,
  • Romà Ogaya,
  • Ifigenia Urbina,
  • Leandro Van Langenhove,
  • Lore T. Verryckt,
  • Elodie A. Courtois,
  • Clément Stahl,
  • Oriol Grau,
  • Otmar Urban,
  • Ivan A. Janssens,
  • Pau Nolis,
  • Miriam Pérez-Trujillo,
  • Teodor Parella,
  • Josep Peñuelas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules25173960
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 17
p. 3960

Abstract

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Productivity of tropical lowland moist forests is often limited by availability and functional allocation of phosphorus (P) that drives competition among tree species and becomes a key factor in determining forestall community diversity. We used non-target 31P-NMR metabolic profiling to study the foliar P-metabolism of trees of a French Guiana rainforest. The objective was to test the hypotheses that P-use is species-specific, and that species diversity relates to species P-use and concentrations of P-containing compounds, including inorganic phosphates, orthophosphate monoesters and diesters, phosphonates and organic polyphosphates. We found that tree species explained the 59% of variance in 31P-NMR metabolite profiling of leaves. A principal component analysis showed that tree species were separated along PC 1 and PC 2 of detected P-containing compounds, which represented a continuum going from high concentrations of metabolites related to non-active P and P-storage, low total P concentrations and high N:P ratios, to high concentrations of P-containing metabolites related to energy and anabolic metabolism, high total P concentrations and low N:P ratios. These results highlight the species-specific use of P and the existence of species-specific P-use niches that are driven by the distinct species-specific position in a continuum in the P-allocation from P-storage compounds to P-containing molecules related to energy and anabolic metabolism.

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