The High-Affinity Potassium Transporter EpHKT1; 2 From the Extremophile Eutrema parvula Mediates Salt Toleranceopen access
- Authors
- Ali, Akhtar; Khan, Irfan Ullah; Jan, Masood; Khan, Haris Ali; Hussain, Shah; Nisar, Muhammad; Chung, Woo Sik; Yun, Dae-Jin
- Issue Date
- 30-Jul-2018
- Publisher
- FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
- Keywords
- Arabidopsis; Eutrema parvula; HKT1; Na+/K+ transporter; salt tolerance; glycophyte; halophyte
- Citation
- FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE, v.9
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
- Volume
- 9
- URI
- https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/11461
- DOI
- 10.3389/fpls.2018.01108
- ISSN
- 1664-462X
- Abstract
- To survive salt stress, plants must maintain a balance between sodium and potassium ions. High-affinity potassium transporters (HKTs) play a key role in reducing Na+ toxicity through K+ uptake. Eutrema parvula (formerly known as Thellungiella parvula), a halophyte closely related to Arabidopsis, has two HKT1 genes that encode EpHKT1;1 and EpHKT1;2. In response to high salinity, the EpHKT1;2 transcript level increased rapidly; by contrast, the EpHKT1;1 transcript increased more slowly in response to salt treatment. Yeast cells expressing EpHKT1;2 were able to tolerate high concentrations of NaCl, whereas EpHKT1;1-expressing yeast cells remained sensitive to NaCl. Amino acid sequence alignment with other plant HKTs showed that EpHKT1;1 contains an asparagine residue (Asn-213) in the second pore-loop domain, but EpHKT1;2 contains an aspartic acid residue (Asp-205) at the same position. Yeast cells expressing EpHKT1;1, in which Asn-213 was substituted with Asp, were able to tolerate high concentrations of NaCl. In contrast, substitution of Asp-205 by Asn in EpHKT1;2 did not enhance salt tolerance and rather resulted in a similar function to that of AtHKT1 (Na+ influx but no K+ influx), indicating that the presence of Asn or Asp determines the mode of cation selectivity of the HKT1-type transporters. Moreover, Arabidopsis plants (Col-gl) overexpressing EpHKT1;2 showed significantly higher tolerance to salt stress and accumulated less Na+ and more K+ compared to those overexpressing EpHKT1;1 or AtHKT1. Taken together, these results suggest that EpHKT1;2 mediates tolerance to Na+ ion toxicity in E. parvula and is a major contributor to its halophytic nature.
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