How potassium fertilizer unlocks the secret to sweeter citrus
en-GBde-DEes-ESfr-FR

How potassium fertilizer unlocks the secret to sweeter citrus

18/08/2025 TranSpread

From orchard to table, citrus quality hinges on the balance between sugar production in leaves and storage in fruit—a dynamic known as the source–sink relationship. Potassium, an essential plant nutrient, influences this balance by regulating photosynthesis, carbohydrate transport, and sugar metabolism. While annual crops have revealed much about potassium’s role, the intricate transport systems in perennial fruit trees remain less understood. In citrus, especially, the mechanisms connecting potassium application to sugar delivery are poorly defined. Due to these gaps, a detailed investigation is needed to uncover how potassium shapes sugar production, movement, and storage, paving the way for strategies to consistently improve citrus sweetness and market competitiveness.

Wuhan, China — September 9, 2024 — Citrus growers may have a new ally in the quest for sweeter harvests. In research published (DOI: 10.1093/hr/uhae240) in Horticulture Research, scientists from Huazhong Agricultural University reveal that potassium fertilization fine-tunes the citrus plant’s internal logistics, moving more sugars from leaf to fruit. Through a combination of field trials, pot experiments, and molecular analyses, the team discovered that potassium strengthens both the “source” (leaves) and the “sink” (fruit), with the symplastic transport pathway playing a starring role. Their findings offer a science-backed roadmap to boosting fruit flavor and yield.

In trials with five potassium levels, the researchers identified 1.5% fruit potassium concentration as the sweet spot for maximum soluble sugar content, with higher levels reducing sweetness. Potassium application increased fruit weight, yield, and concentrations of sucrose, fructose, and glucose at multiple developmental stages. In leaves, potassium boosted photosynthesis and sucrose synthesis by enhancing the activities of sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) and sucrose synthase (SS-S), while reducing acid invertase activity to limit sugar breakdown. In fruit, it upregulated sugar-metabolizing genes (CsSPS1, CsSPS4, CsSUS4) and transporters (CsSWEET15, CsTMT2), improving sugar unloading and storage.

A ^13C-isotope labeling experiment showed greater ^13C-sucrose and ^13C-glucose in fruit under potassium treatment, confirming increased carbon flow from leaves. Microscopy revealed denser plasmodesmata and stronger fluorescent signals in treated plants, indicating enhanced symplastic sugar transport. Potassium also expanded the cross-sectional area of leaf vascular bundles, further improving transport capacity. Together, these results show that potassium orchestrates a more powerful and efficient sugar delivery network, driving sweeter, higher-quality oranges.

“Potassium is not just plant nutrition—it’s an active manager of the citrus supply chain,” said Professor Songwei Wu, senior author of the study. “By strengthening the sugar-producing power of leaves and the storage capacity of fruit, potassium application reshapes how carbon moves through the plant. Our work pinpoints the precise conditions—especially the 1.5% fruit potassium threshold—that growers can target to achieve the best flavor and yield. This is about using science to fine-tune orchard management for both quality and profitability.”

For citrus growers, the study delivers clear, actionable guidance: aim for around 1.5% potassium in fruit pulp and time fertilization to coincide with the color-turning stage, when sugar transport peaks. By aligning nutrient supply with the fruit’s developmental needs, growers can maximize sweetness without compromising other quality traits. Beyond citrus, the findings spotlight a general principle—managing potassium to enhance source–sink efficiency—that could benefit other perennial fruit crops. The approach supports higher market value, stronger consumer appeal, and more sustainable orchard practices, turning a common fertilizer into a precision tool for flavor engineering.

###

References

DOI

10.1093/hr/uhae240

Original Source URL

https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhae240

Funding information

This research was supported by the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (2662022ZHQD002), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 32001986), the National Key Research and Development Program of China (2019YFD1000103), and the Modern Citrus Industry Technology System of China (CARS-26).

About Horticulture Research

Horticulture Research is an open access journal of Nanjing Agricultural University and ranked number one in the Horticulture category of the Journal Citation Reports ™ from Clarivate, 2023. The journal is committed to publishing original research articles, reviews, perspectives, comments, correspondence articles and letters to the editor related to all major horticultural plants and disciplines, including biotechnology, breeding, cellular and molecular biology, evolution, genetics, inter-species interactions, physiology, and the origination and domestication of crops.

Paper title: Potassium stimulates fruit sugar accumulation by increasing carbon flow in Citrus sinensis
Fichiers joints
  • A comprehensive structure model of the effects of K on the expression of key genes and enzyme activities involved in Suc metabolism and transport in leaf and fruit in Newhall navel orange. Fru-6-p, fructose-6-phosphate; UDP-Glc, uridine diphosphate glucose; Fru, fructose; Glu, glucose; SPS, sucrose phosphate synthase; CWINV, cell wall invertase; CINV, cytoplasmic invertase; VINV, vacuolar invertase; SS-S, sucrose synthase synthesis direction; SS-C, sucrose synthase catalysis direction; SWEET, sugar will eventually be exported transporters; SUT, sucrose transporter; SE/CC, sieve element/ companion cell; VGT, tonoplast glucose transporter; STP, sugar transporter; TMT, tonoplast monosaccharide transporters; ATPase, adenosine triphosphatase; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; ADP, adenosine diphosphate; V-PPase, vacuolar H+-pyrophosphatase; Pi, phosphate; PPi, diphosphate. Red and blue fonts indicate upregulation and downregulation of enzyme activities or gene expression with increasing K application.
18/08/2025 TranSpread
Regions: North America, United States, Asia, China
Keywords: Science, Agriculture & fishing

Disclaimer: AlphaGalileo is not responsible for the accuracy of content posted to AlphaGalileo by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the AlphaGalileo system.

Témoignages

We have used AlphaGalileo since its foundation but frankly we need it more than ever now to ensure our research news is heard across Europe, Asia and North America. As one of the UK’s leading research universities we want to continue to work with other outstanding researchers in Europe. AlphaGalileo helps us to continue to bring our research story to them and the rest of the world.
Peter Dunn, Director of Press and Media Relations at the University of Warwick
AlphaGalileo has helped us more than double our reach at SciDev.Net. The service has enabled our journalists around the world to reach the mainstream media with articles about the impact of science on people in low- and middle-income countries, leading to big increases in the number of SciDev.Net articles that have been republished.
Ben Deighton, SciDevNet
AlphaGalileo is a great source of global research news. I use it regularly.
Robert Lee Hotz, LA Times

Nous travaillons en étroite collaboration avec...


  • e
  • The Research Council of Norway
  • SciDevNet
  • Swiss National Science Foundation
  • iesResearch
Copyright 2025 by DNN Corp Terms Of Use Privacy Statement