| Literature DB >> 28553305 |
Seok-Jun Moon1, Hyun Y Kim1, Hyunsik Hwang1, Jin-Ae Kim1, Yongsang Lee1, Myung K Min1, In S Yoon1, Taek-Ryoun Kwon1, Beom-Gi Kim1.
Abstract
Stomata are the main gateways for water and air transport between leaves and the environment. Inward-rectifying potassium channels regulate photo-induced stomatal opening. Rice contains three inward rectifying shaker-like potassium channel proteins, OsKAT1, OsKAT2, and OsKAT3. Among these, only OsKAT2 is specifically expressed in guard cells. Here, we investigated the functions of OsKAT2 in stomatal regulation using three dominant negative mutant proteins, OsKAT2(T235R), OsKAT2(T285A) and OsKAT2(T285D), which are altered in amino acids in the channel pore and at a phosphorylation site. Yeast complementation and patch clamp assays showed that all three mutant proteins lost channel activity. However, among plants overexpressing these mutant proteins, only plants overexpressing OsKAT2(T235R) showed significantly less water loss than the control. Moreover, overexpression of this mutant protein led to delayed photo-induced stomatal opening and increased drought tolerance. Our results indicate that OsKAT2 is an inward- rectifying shaker-like potassium channel that mainly functions in stomatal opening. Interestingly, overexpression of OsKAT2(T235R) did not cause serious defects in growth or yield in rice, suggesting that OsKAT2 is a potential target for engineering plants with improved drought tolerance without yield penalty.Entities:
Keywords: OsKAT2; dominant negative mutant; guard cell; inward rectifying K channel; rice; stomatal behavior
Year: 2017 PMID: 28553305 PMCID: PMC5427459 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2017.00772
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753