{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Endodermal suberin restricts root leakage of cesium: a suitable tracer for potassium. {Author}: Vestenaa MW;Husted S;Minutello F;Persson DP; {Journal}: Physiol Plant {Volume}: 176 {Issue}: 3 {Year}: 2024 May-Jun {Factor}: 5.081 {DOI}: 10.1111/ppl.14393 {Abstract}: An urgent challenge within crop production is to maintain productivity in a world plagued by climate change and its associated plant stresses, such as heat, drought and salinity. A key factor in this endeavor is to understand the dynamics of root suberization, and its role in plant-water relations and nutrient transport. This study focuses on the hypothesis that endodermal suberin, acts as a physical barrier preventing radial potassium (K) movement out of the vascular tissues during translocation. Previous attempts to experimentally support this idea have produced inconsistent results. We developed a Laser Ablation-Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) method, allowing us to visualize the distribution of mineral elements and track K movement. Cesium (Cs), dosed in optimized concentrations, was found to be an ideal tracer for K, due to its low background and similar chemical/biological properties. In suberin mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana, we observed a positive correlation between suberin levels and K translocation efficiency, indicating that suberin enhances the plant's ability to retain K within the vascular tissues during translocation from root to shoot. In barley (Hordeum vulgare), fully suberized seminal roots maintained higher K concentrations in the stele compared to younger, less suberized root zones. This suggests that suberization increases with root maturity, enhancing the barrier against K leakage. In nodal roots, suberin was scattered towards the phloem in mature root zones. Despite this incomplete suberization, nodal roots still restrict outward K movement, demonstrating that even partial suberin barriers can significantly reduce K loss. Our findings provide evidence that suberin is a barrier to K leakage during root-to-shoot translocation. This understanding is crucial to maintain crop productivity in the face of climate change.