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calcium-nutrition

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Calcium nutrition refers to the study of how plants acquire, transport, and utilize calcium as an essential macronutrient for growth and development. Calcium plays a critical structural role in cell walls and membranes, and also acts as a key signaling molecule that mediates plant responses to environmental stresses and developmental cues. Understanding calcium nutrition is vital for improving crop quality, preventing calcium-deficiency disorders, and elucidating the molecular pathways that govern nutrient sensing in plants.

AVP1-mediated pyrophosphate homeostasis coordinates calcium-dependent cellulose synthesis and autoimmunity during leaf growth.

PubMed · 2026-04-08

Scientists discovered that calcium-starved plants trigger their own immune systems to attack themselves, stunting leaf growth. The culprit is a molecular traffic jam: without enough calcium, a key enzyme fails, a waste molecule piles up, cell walls weaken, and the plant misfires an immune alarm — but fixing the enzyme restores normal growth.

1

Calcium deficiency reduces the abundance of the AVP1 enzyme, causing inorganic pyrophosphate to accumulate in the cytosol and disrupt cellulose synthesis in plant cell walls.

2

Impaired cell walls trigger salicylic acid-driven autoimmune signaling — the plant's own immune system — which actively suppresses new leaf growth.

3

Genetically enhancing pyrophosphate breakdown improved low-calcium growth tolerance, and this entire mechanism was also confirmed to operate in tomato, not just the model plant.