| Literature DB >> 12806781 |
Katarzyna Kabała1, Grazyna Kłobus, Małgorzata Janicka-Russak.
Abstract
Nitrate transport across the tonoplast has been studied using vacuole membranes isolated from cucumber roots grown in nitrate. The addition of NO3- ions into the tonoplast with ATP-generated transmembrane proton gradient caused the dissipation of delta pH, indicating the NO3(-)-induced proton efflux from vesicles. NO3(-)-dependent H+ efflux was almost insensitive to the transmembrane electrical potential difference, suggesting the presence of an electroneutral NO3-/H+ antiporter in the tonoplast. Apart from saturation kinetics, with respect to nitrate ions, NO3(-)-linked H+ efflux from the tonoplast of cucumber roots showed other characteristics expected of substrate-specific transporters. Experiments employing protein modifying reagents (NEM, pCMBS, PGO and SITS) indicated that a crucial role in the activity of tonoplast nitrate/proton antiporter is played by lysine residues (strong inhibition of NO3-/H+ antiport by SITS). None of the ion-channel inhibitors (NIF, ZnSO4 and TEA-Cl) used in the experiments had a direct effect on the nitrate transport into tonoplast membranes. On the other hand, every protein reagent, as well as NIF and ZnSO4, significantly affected the ATP-dependent proton transport in vesicles. Only TEA-Cl, the potassium channel blocker, had no effect on the vacuolar proton pumping activity.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12806781 DOI: 10.1078/0176-1617-00787
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Plant Physiol ISSN: 0176-1617 Impact factor: 3.549