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The putative role of fumarprotocetraric acid in the manganese tolerance of the lichen Lecanora conizaeoides

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 May 2007

Markus Hauck
Affiliation:
Albrecht von Haller Institute of Plant Sciences, Dept. Plant Ecology, University of Göttingen, Untere Karspüle 2, D-37073 Göttingen, Germany
Siegfried Huneck
Affiliation:
Fliederweg 34a, D-06179 Langenbogen/Saalkreis, Germany

Extract

Hauck & Huneck (2007) and Hauck et al. (2007) established that lichen secondary chemistry is related to metal absorption in the apoplast of lichens. Depsidones occurring in the medulla of the Mn2+ and Cu2+-sensitive epiphytic lichen Hypogymnia physodes were found to reduce the absorption of Mn2+ and Cu2+ at cation exchange sites (Hauck & Huneck 2007). Several lichen substances, belonging to the depsidones, depsides, anthraquinones, or pulvinic acid derivatives, are known to absorb Fe3+ (Engstrom et al. 1980; Hauck et al. 2007). Occurrence of such lichen substances in lichens of Fe-poor sites, but rarity in lichens from Fe-rich sites suggests that they promote the intracellular uptake of Fe3+ (Hauck et al. 2007). In Acarosporion sinopicae lichens specialized on Fe-rich rock and slag, only two efficient Fe3+ absorbers are known, viz. the depsidone norstictic acid and the pulvinic acid derivative rhizocarpic acid. Their occurrence in Acarosporion sinopicae lichens is attributed to the fact that they reduce the absorption of Fe2+ at cation exchange sites despite their high affinity to Fe3+ (Hauck et al. 2007). The observations by Engstrom et al. (1980), Hauck & Huneck (2007) and Hauck et al. (2007), which were made in experiments with isolated lichen substances, suggest that these secondary metabolites control metal homeostasis in lichens by reducing the absorption of selected metal ions in the apoplast and by promoting the uptake of Fe3+.

Type
Short Communications
Copyright
Copyright © British Lichen Society 2007

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