Regulation of K+ Transport in Tomato Roots by the TSS1 Locus. Implications in Salt Tolerance

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Abstract

The tss1 tomato (Lycapersicon esculentum) mutant exhibited reduced growth in low K+ and hypersensitivity to Na+ and Li+. Increased Ca2+ in the culture medium suppressed the Na+ hypersensitivity and the growth defect on low K+ medium of tss1 seedlings. Interestingly, removing NH4+ from the growth medium suppressed all growth defects of tss1, suggesting a defective NH 4+-insensitive component of K+ transport. We performed electrophysiological studies to understand the contribution of the NH4+-sensitive and -insensitive components of K + transport in wild-type and tss1 roots. Although at 1 mM Ca 2+ we found no differences in affinity for K+ uptake between wild type and tss1 in the absence of NH4+, the maximum depolarization value was about one-half in tss1, suggesting that a set of K+ transporters is inactive in the mutant. However, these transporters became active by raising the external Ca2+ concentration. In the presence of NH4+, a reduced affinity for K+ was observed in both types of seedlings, but tss1 at 1 mM Ca2+ exhibited a 2-fold higher Km than wild type did. This defect was again corrected by raising the external concentration of Ca2+. Therefore, membrane potential measurements in root cells indicated that tss1 is affected in both NH4+-sensitive and -insensitive components of K+ transport at low Ca2+ concentrations and that this defective transport is rescued by increasing the concentration of Ca2+. Our results suggest that the TSS1 gene product is part of a crucial pathway mediating the beneficial effects of Ca 2+ involved in K+ nutrition and salt tolerance.

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Rubio, L., Rosado, A., Linares-Rueda, A., Borsani, O., García-Sánchez, M. J., Valpuesta, V., … Botella, M. A. (2004). Regulation of K+ Transport in Tomato Roots by the TSS1 Locus. Implications in Salt Tolerance. Plant Physiology, 134(1), 452–459. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.103.030361

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