The Putative Plasma Membrane Na<sup>+</sup>/H<sup>+</sup> Antiporter SOS1 Controls Long-Distance Na<sup>+</sup> Transport in Plants — Huazhong Shi (2002) | RDL Network
The Putative Plasma Membrane Na<sup>+</sup>/H<sup>+</sup> Antiporter SOS1 Controls Long-Distance Na<sup>+</sup> Transport in Plants
Article 2002 en
Authors
HS
Huazhong Shi
FQ
Francisco J. Quintero
JP
José M. Pardo
Abstract
1 min read
The salt tolerance locus SOS1 from Arabidopsis has been shown to encode a putative plasma membrane Na+/H+ antiporter. In this study, we examined the tissue-specific pattern of gene expression as well as the Na+ transport activity and subcellular localization of SOS1. When expressed in a yeast mutant deficient in endogenous Na+ transporters, SOS1 was able to reduce Na+ accumulation and improve salt tolerance of the mutant cells. Confocal imaging of a SOS1–green fluorescent protein fusion protein in transgenic Arabidopsis plants indicated that SOS1 is localized in the plasma membrane. Analysis of SOS1 promoter–β-glucuronidase transgenic Arabidopsis plants revealed preferential expression of SOS1 in epidermal cells at the root tip and in parenchyma cells at the xylem/symplast boundary of roots, stems, and leaves. Under mild salt stress (25 mM NaCl), sos1 mutant shoot accumulated less Na+ than did the wild-type shoot. However, under severe salt stress (100 mM NaCl), sos1 mutant plants accumulated more Na+ than did the wild type. There also was greater Na+ content in the xylem sap of sos1 mutant plants exposed to 100 mM NaCl. These results suggest that SOS1 is critical for controlling long-distance Na+ transport from root to shoot. We present a model in which SOS1 functions in retrieving Na+ from the xylem stream under severe salt stress, whereas under mild salt stress it may function in loading Na+ into the xylem.
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.