| Literature DB >> 34884802 |
Jin-Yan Zhou1, Dong-Li Hao2, Guang-Zhe Yang3.
Abstract
Cytosolic pH homeostasis is a precondition for the normal growth and stress responses in plants, and H+ flux across the plasma membrane is essential for cytoplasmic pH control. Hence, this review focuses on seven types of proteins that possess direct H+ transport activity, namely, H+-ATPase, NHX, CHX, AMT, NRT, PHT, and KT/HAK/KUP, to summarize their plasma-membrane-located family members, the effect of corresponding gene knockout and/or overexpression on cytosolic pH, the H+ transport pathway, and their functional regulation by the extracellular/cytosolic pH. In general, H+-ATPases mediate H+ extrusion, whereas most members of other six proteins mediate H+ influx, thus contributing to cytosolic pH homeostasis by directly modulating H+ flux across the plasma membrane. The fact that some AMTs/NRTs mediate H+-coupled substrate influx, whereas other intra-family members facilitate H+-uncoupled substrate transport, demonstrates that not all plasma membrane transporters possess H+-coupled substrate transport mechanisms, and using the transport mechanism of a protein to represent the case of the entire family is not suitable. The transport activity of these proteins is regulated by extracellular and/or cytosolic pH, with different structural bases for H+ transfer among these seven types of proteins. Notably, intra-family members possess distinct pH regulatory characterization and underlying residues for H+ transfer. This review is anticipated to facilitate the understanding of the molecular basis for cytosolic pH homeostasis. Despite this progress, the strategy of their cooperation for cytosolic pH homeostasis needs further investigation.Entities:
Keywords: H+ transfer pathway; H+ transport proteins; cytosolic pH homeostasis; pH regulation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34884802 PMCID: PMC8657649 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222312998
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Plasma-membrane-located H+ transport proteins. H+-ATPase family functions in mediating H+ efflux from the cytosol to the extracellular space, whereas most members of the NHX, CHX, AMT, NRT, PHT, KT/HAK/KUP, AAP, SULTR, SUT family are responsible for mediating H+ influx from the extracellular space to the cytosol. Notably, several intra-family members of AMT and NRT do not transport H+, indicating that not all plasma membrane transporters possess H+-coupled substrate transport mechanisms. Seven types of H+ transport proteins focused on in this review (H+-ATPase, NHX, CHX, AMT, NRT, PHT, and KT/HAK/KUP) are indicated by black font, whereas other proteins (AAP, SULTR, SUT, etc.) are indicated by the gray font. Specific proteins with experimental evidences (references are indicated by [number]) are presented in the corresponding family. Arrows (↑) indicate the direction of H+ flux. Inability to transport H+ is indicated by special lines (symbols as shown for LeAMT1;1 and AtNRT2.4). Abbreviations: H+-ATPase (Hpumping ATPase), NHX (Na+/H exchanger), CHX (cation/H exchanger), AMT (ammonium transporter), NRT (nitrate transporter), PHT (phosphate transporter), KT/HAK/KUP (K transporter/high-affinity K transporter/K uptake permease), SUT (Sucrose transporter), AAP (amino acid permease) and SULTR (sulfate transporter).
Functional regulation by extracellular and/or cytosolic pH and key residues for H+ transport.
| Protein Name | Regulation by pH | Key Residues of H+ Transfer Pathway |
|---|---|---|
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| AHA2 | Bell-shaped dependence on cytosolic pH, with maximal transport activity approaching at pH 6.6 [ | D684, N106 and R655 [ |
| AHA1&AHA3, | Bell-shaped dependence on cytosolic pH, with maximal transport activity approaching at pH 6.0–6.6 [ | |
| AHA7 | Active only when extracellular pH is ≥ 6.0 [ | |
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| AtNHX7/SOS1 | Unclear [ | |
| PpSOS1 | Stimulated by extracellular acidification [ | |
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| AtCHX13 | Stimulated by extracellular acidification [ | |
| AtCHX17 | Unclear [ | |
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| PvAMT1;1 | Stimulated by extracellular acidification [ | H211 [ |
| AtAMT1;2 | Q67, W145 [ | |
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| AtNRT1.1 | Stimulated by extracellular acidification [ | (41)EXXER(45), H356 [ |
| BnNRT1.2, AtNRT1.4, AtNRT1.5, AtNRT1.6, OsNRT1, OsNRT2.3b | Stimulated by extracellular acidification [ | |
| OsNRT2.3b | Inhibited by cytosolic acidification [ | |
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| AtPHT1;1 | Stimulated by extracellular acidification [ | D35, D38, R134 and D144 [ |
| OsPHT1;1, OsPHT1;6, OsPHT1;8, OsPHT1;9, OsPHT1;10 | Bell-shaped dependence on cytosolic pH, with maximal transport activity approaching at pH 5.5–6.5 [ | |
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| AtHAK5 | E312 [ | |
| DmHAK5, CnHAK1&CnHAK2, | Stimulated by extracellular acidification [ |