| Literature DB >> 22639605 |
Abstract
Understanding the regulated inter- and intra-cellular metal circulation is one of the challenges in the field of metal homeostasis. Inside organisms metal ions are bound to organic ligands to prevent their uncontrolled reactivity and to increase their solubility. Nicotianamine (NA) is one of the important ligands. This non-proteinogenic amino acid is synthesized by nicotianamine synthase (NAS). NA is involved in mobilization, uptake, transport, storage, and detoxification of metals. Much of the progress in understanding NA function has been achieved by studying mutants with altered nicotianamine levels. Mild and strong Arabidopsis mutants impaired in nicotianamine synthesis have been identified and characterized, namely nas4x-1 and nas4x-2. Arabidopsis thaliana has four NAS genes. In this review, we summarize the structure and evolution of the NAS genes in the Arabidopsis genome. We summarize previous results and present novel evidence that the four NAS genes have partially overlapping functions when plants are exposed to Fe deficiency and nickel supply. We compare the phenotypes of nas4x-1 and nas4x-2 and summarize the functions of NAS genes and NA as deduced from the studies of mutant phenotypes.Entities:
Keywords: chelation; gene family; metal binding; multiple mutant; nicotianamine
Year: 2011 PMID: 22639605 PMCID: PMC3355620 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2011.00069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Figure 1Genomic organization of . (A) Scheme representing the five chromosomes of Arabidopsis, indicating the location of the four NAS genes and their gene identity numbers (Bauer et al., 2004). (B) Scheme representing the location of T-DNA insertions, indicating the allele names. It is shown which alleles are combined in the quadruple mutants nas4x-1 and nas4x-2 (Klatte et al., 2009). (C) Table listing the primers used for genotyping as described in (Klatte et al., 2009) and the primers used for gene expression analysis by reverse transcription-qPCR according to (Klatte and Bauer, 2009).
Figure 2Analysis of multiple nas . (A) Percentage of leaf chlorosis phenotypes of multiple nas mutants, combining the alleles nas1-1, nas2-1, nas3-1, and nas4-1, germinated for 2 weeks on Hoagland agar medium devoid of Fe; the medium is described in (Jakoby et al., 2004). The colors indicate the percentage of plants with light green leaves (weak leaf chlorosis, black), light green intercostal areas (intermediate degree of leaf chlorosis, light gray), yellow intercostal areas (strong leaf chlorosis, dark gray). The numbers on the right side indicate the number of seedlings examined; * indicates a strong phenotype. (B) Table summarizing the gene expression results from (Bauer et al., 2004; Klatte et al., 2009) and Schuler et al. (in preparation).
Comparison of .
| Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Genotype | Klatte et al. ( | ||
| Full-length | none | Klatte et al. ( | |
| NA content, versus WT | 10% in leaves, vegetative stage; 0% in leaves, reproductive stage; 40% in seeds | 0% in all tested leaves; no seeds produced | Klatte et al. ( |
| Interveinal leaf chlorosis | Starts during reproductive phase | Strong during vegetative and reproductive phase; more severe in young leaves than in older leaves | Klatte et al. ( |
| Numerous small rosette leaves | Yes | Yes | Klatte et al. ( |
| Flowers | Normal | Sterile | Klatte et al. ( |
| Flowering time and senescence | Normal | Delayed | Klatte et al. ( |
| Global gene expression | Categories affected: metal homeostasis, biotic stress responses, leaf photosystem and root carbohydrate metabolism | n.a. | Schuler et al. ( |
*A more detailed investigation of .