Severely K + deficient soils elicited isoflavones, coumestans, pterocarpans, and soyasaponins in trifoliate leaves, likely associated to oxidative and photodynamic stress status. Potassium fertilization upregulated carbohydrate, galactolipid, and flavonol glycoside biosynthesis in leaves and pod valves, while K + deficient pod tissues showed increasing amino acids, oligosaccharides, benzoic acid derivatives, and isoflavones contents. Under very low potassium availability, soybean plants accumulated of Ca 2+, Mg 2+, Fe 2+, Cu 2+, and B in young and old leaves. Multivariate analyses (PCA-X&Y e O2PLS-DA) showed that 51 compounds of 19 metabolic pathways were regulated in response to K + availability. Soybean leaf and pod tissue (valves and immature seeds) extracts were analysed by ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry (UPLC-HRMS) and inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES). Using integrated omics, ionomics and metabolomics, we investigated the field-grown Glycine max (soybean) response, after four K + soil fertilization rates. Limited studies have investigated the effect of K + fertilization on soybean metabolism. Potassium (K +) has vital physiological and metabolic functions in plants and its availability can impact tolerance to biotic and abiotic stress conditions.
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