News Release

Special iron uptake deep inside the Savoy cabbage head

It has been revealed that the mechanism of iron uptake by plastids in the absence of light is similar to the process facilitated by photosynthesis.

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Eötvös Loránd University

Halved Savoy cabbage head

image: Halved Savoy cabbage heads showing the different leaf layers and their colour change, as well as the central stem on which the leaves are developing. view more 

Credit: Photo: Katalin Solymosi

A surprising twist has been found in a study by researchers at Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE), published in the journal Frontiers in Plant Science. Their research has revealed that the mechanism of iron uptake by plastids in the absence of light is similar to the process facilitated by photosynthesis. Their discovery could have implications for our food and health knowledge and its applications, as our plant foods and their plastids represent an important source of iron for humans.

Iron is one of the most important mineral nutrients for living organisms. It is therefore essential in both humans and plants for enzymes involved in crucial life processes such as cellular respiration or photosynthesis. Iron incorporation into these enzymes is thus essential for the metabolism. 

Photosynthesis - the metabolic process that uses sunlight energy to produce organic matter from carbon dioxide and water in plants - therefore requires iron. Since photosynthesis takes place inside chloroplasts, within the plant cell iron must be transported into these organelles. At the Department of Plant Physiology and Molecular Plant Biology of the Eötvös Loránd University, Dr Ádám Solti and his research team have been investigating the molecular processes that enable iron uptake of chloroplasts for many years.

"Because of the importance of photosynthesis, we know a lot about photosynthetically active plastids and have been studying their iron uptake for a long time. Iron uptake by chloroplasts requires light. However,

it has been a long-standing question whether iron uptake in plant tissues that are not exposed to sunlight is the same as in chloroplasts"

explains the basic idea of the research Máté Sági-Kazár, PhD student. All that was needed was a suitable research object from which large quantities of plastids of different developmental stages could be isolated for the investigation. The test object was practically lying on the (kitchen) table.

We all know Savoy cabbage well. The Savoy cabbage heads are huge, modified buds, from the stalk of which arise a number of leaves of different colour and of different developmental stages. In a half-cut Savoy cabbage head, you can see that the outer leaves, exposed to the light, are green, but as we move inwards, the leaves gradually fade, and the innermost, smallest and youngest leaves are white-yellowish. This phenomenon is related to the fact that in the absence of light, angiosperm plants cannot produce chlorophyll, the green pigment, and without it they cannot photosynthesize.

"The inner leaves of cabbage heads are practically shaded by the outer green leaves, blocking them from light, so that a light deficit gradually develops moving inwards inside the heads. Instead of the accumulation of green chlorophylls in the inner leaf layers, we can only see the yellowish colour of the carotenoids present, and special types of photosynthetically inactive plastids, the so-called etioplasts, develop in them, as described earlier in the case of white cabbage" explains Dr Katalin Solymosi, one of the participants in the research, while talking about the advantages of the plant used for the experiments.

This multi-institutional and multi-researcher study has therefore investigated the iron uptake mechanisms of the plastids of leaves that are photosynthetically inactive, and has compared them with those that are. The physiological processes observed for the first time showed that the uptake of iron by the plastids follows exactly – although to a lesser extent – the same principle as that characterizing chloroplasts.

"During the past fifteen years, the uptake of iron by chloroplasts was thought to be exclusively linked to photosynthesis and, to a lesser extent, to the direct chemical reduction of iron by sunlight.

The results of our studies have brought about a surprising change in what we previously knew about the vital nutrient homeostasis of organelles"

summarised Dr Ádám Solti, the leader of the research.

All these basic research-type scientific studies are of particular interest to the food industry and health care, as our plant-based foods and their plastids represent an important source of iron for humans. Therefore, it is important to understand which factors play an important role in the uptake and accumulation of iron in plastids and how it may be improved or regulated.


The research was funded by a grant of the National Research, Development and Innovation Office – NKFIH (K-135607). The work of Máté Sági-Kazár was supported by the New National Excellence Programme of the Ministry of Innovation and Technology. The research of Katalin Solymosi (ELTE), Sándor Lenk (BME) and Ádám Solti (ELTE) was supported by the Bolyai János Research Scholarship from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

Article details:

Máté Sági-Kazár, Éva Sárvári, Barnabás Cseh, Levente Illés, Zoltán May, Csaba Hegedűs, Attila Barócsi, Sándor LenkKatalin Solymosi and Ádám SoltiIron uptake of etioplasts is independent from photosynthesis but applies the reduction based strategy. Frontiers in Plant Science 14:1227811. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2023.1227811


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