| Literature DB >> 24129173 |
Pedro Almeida1, Diana Katschnig, Albertus H de Boer.
Abstract
The increase in soil salinity poses a serious threat to agricultural yields. Under salinity stress, several Na⁺ transporters play an essential role in Na⁺ tolerance in plants. Amongst all Na+ transporters, HKT has been shown to have a crucial role in both mono and dicotyledonous plants in the tolerance to salinity stress. Here we present an overview of the physiological role of HKT transporters in plant Na⁺ homeostasis. HKT regulation and amino acids important to the correct function of HKT transporters are reviewed. The functions of the most recently characterized HKT members from both HKT1 and HKT2 subfamilies are also discussed. Topics that still need to be studied in future research (e.g., HKT regulation) as well as research suggestions (e.g., generation of HKT mutants) are addressed.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24129173 PMCID: PMC3821619 DOI: 10.3390/ijms141020359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
List of all HKT1 transporters isolated and characterized.
| Transporter | Expression in planta | Ref. | Function in planta | Ref. | Transport selectivity when heterologous expressed | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phloem (roots and shoots) | [ | Loading excessive shoot Na+ into the phloem | [ | Na+ transport ( | [ | |
| Xylem parenchyma cells | [ | Unloading of Na+ from the xylem into XPC | [ | K+ transport ( | ||
| In the leaves: bulliform cells and vascular tissues. | [ | Na+ transport ( | [ | |||
| In the roots: similar to OsHKT2;1. | ||||||
| Not detected in roots. | [ | |||||
| Expression does not change with NaCl stress in the leaves. | ||||||
| In the leaves: bulliform cells and vascular tissues, mesophyll cells. In the roots: cortex and vascular tissues in the stele. | [ | Na+ transport ( | [ | |||
| Leaf sheaths. | [ | Control of sheath-to-blade transfer of Na+ | [ | |||
| Mainly expressed in xylem parenchyma cells of both roots and leaves. | [ | Control of root-to-shoot transfer of Na+ by unloading of Na+ from the xylem into XPC | [ | Na+ transport ( | [ | |
| Expressed in the roots, leaf sheath and leaf blades. | [ | Unloading of Na+ from the xylem into XPC | [ | |||
| Expressed in the roots but not in the shoots. | [ | Unloading of Na+ from the xylem into XPC | [ | Na+ transport ( | [ | |
| Na+ transport ( | ||||||
| Na+ transport ( | [ | |||||
| Ubiquitously expressed (roots, stems, leaves, flowers, fruits). | [ | Na+ transport ( | Almeida | |||
| NIL and treatment dependent | ||||||
| Ubiquitously expressed (roots, stems, leaves, flowers, fruits). NIL and treatment dependent | [ | No transport activity detected in either | [ | |||
| Almeida | ||||||
| Expressed in the leaves, stems and roots | [ | K+ transport ( | [ | |||
| Na+, K+ and Rb+ transport ( | ||||||
| Expressed in the leaves, stems and roots | [ | K+ transport ( | [ | |||
| Na+, K+, Rb+, Li+ Transport ( | ||||||
| In the leaves: xylem parenchyma cells and phloem cells; In the roots: epidermal cells and vascular tissues | [ | The authors proposed a model where McHKT1;1 Unloads Na+ from the xylem in the shoots | [ | K+ transport ( | [ | |
| Rb+, Cs+, K+, Na+ and Li+ transport ( |
List of all HKT2 transporters isolated and characterized.
| Transporter | Expression in planta | Ref. | Function in planta | Ref. | Transport selectivity when heterologous expressed | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| In the roots: epidermis, exodermis, cortex differentiated into aerenchyma, stele (mainly in the phloem); In the leaves: bulliform cells, xylem, phloem, mesophyll cells | [ | Nutritional Na+ uptake from the external medium | [ | Na+ and K+ transport ( | [ | |
| Na+ transport ( | [ | |||||
| K+ transport ( | [ | |||||
| Expressed only in the roots | [ | Na+/K+ symporter in BY2 tobacco cells | [ | Na+, K+, ( | [ | |
| Expected to co-transport both Na+ and K+ in conditions of K+ starvation | [ | |||||
| Expressed only in the roots | [ | Expected to co-transport both Na+ and K+ in the roots in conditions of low K+ and under salt stress | [ | Na+ and K+ transport ( | [ | |
| Marginally expressed in the roots in comparison to the shoots | [ | No currents or uptake observed in | [ | |||
| Vasculature of primary/ lateral root cells, leaf sheaths, spikelets and the base of stems. Expressed also in mesophyll cells | [ | Possible role in K+ homeostasis as a K+ transporter/channel | [ | Permeable to NH4+, Li+, Na+, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+ Zn2+, Mn2+, Cu2+, Fe2+, Cd2+ ( | [ | |
| Possible redundant role in planta as o | [ | Permeable to Na+, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+ ( | [ | |||
| K+ transport ( | ||||||
| Proposed to function as a K+ transporter involved in both nutritional K+ uptake and long-distance K+ transport | [ | Na+ and K+ transport ( | [ | |||
| Root cortical and stele cells Vascular tissue of mesophyll cells | [ | Na+ uptake from the external medium | [ | Permeable to Na+, K+, Cs+ and Rb+ ( | [ | |
| K+ transport ( | ||||||
| Na+ and K+ transport ( | [ | |||||
| Na+ and K+ transport ( | ||||||
| Permeable to Na+, K+ and Mg+ ( | [ | |||||
| Mainly in roots | [ | Possible high affinity K+ transporter | [ | Na+ and K+ transport ( | [ | |
| Root cortex, leaf blades and leaf sheaths | [ | Possible involvement in the root K+ (re)absorption at very low K+ concentrations | [ | Na+ and K+ transporter ( | [ | |
| Possible uptake of Na+ in the roots | ||||||
| Roots and shoots | [ | Na+ and K+ transport ( | [ | |||
| ------- | ------- | Na+ and K+ uptake ( | [ |
Figure 1Mechanisms involved in the regulation of HKT transporters. Cytokinins and ABI4 down regulate the expression of AtHKT1;1 whereas the presence of ROS in the xylem stream affects expression or activity of AtHKT1;1. In rice, the application of phosphorylation inhibitors causes a severe reduction in Na+ influx in the root epidermal cells.
Figure 2HKT structure and location of specific amino acids that were shown to affect the transport properties when mutated. Alignments show the amino acid sequence of specific domains where these amino acids (highlighted in red) are present (different plant species) and have been shown to have a crucial role in the correct functioning of the transporter. The function of the highlighted amino acids has been studied by expression of the mutated proteins in heterologous systems.
Figure 3Targeted expression of AtHKT1;1 in the roots of both (A) dicotyledonous and (B) monocotyledonous plants. The targeted over-expression of AtHKT1;1 in the roots, regardless of the tissue as both over-expression in the (C) epidermal and cortical cells as well as (D and E) in the pericycle, resulted in enhanced salinity tolerance in Arabidopsis thaliana plants. Also in rice the overexpression of AtHKT1;1 in the (F and G) epidermis and cortical cells resulted also in enhanced salinity tolerance. This might be a useful strategy to use with other HKT genes to ameliorate the salt sensitivity of crop species. Bars: (C) 75 μm, (D and E) 40 μm, (F and G) 100 μm. Figure 3C,F,G reproduced with permission from [20]. Figures 3D,E reproduced with permission from [12].