Functional analysis of ion transport properties and salt tolerance mechanisms of RtHKT1 from the recretohalophyte Reaumuria trigyna
Li, N. (Key Laboratory of Herbage and Endemic Crop Biotechnology (Inner Mongolia University), Ministry of Education, College of Life Sciences, Inner Mongolia University, Hohhot (China)) | Du, C. | Ma, B. | Gao, Z. | Wu, Z. | Zheng, L. | Niu, Y. | Wang, Y.
Reaumuria trigyna is an endangered recretohalophyte and a small archaic feral shrub that is endemic to arid and semiarid plateau regions of Inner Mongolia, China. Based on transcriptomic data, we isolated a high-affinity potassium transporter gene (RtHKT1) from R. trigyna, which encoded a plasma membrane-localized protein. RtHKT1 was rapidly upregulated by high Na+ or low K+ and exhibited different tissue-specific expression patterns before and after stress treatment. Transgenic yeast showed tolerance to high Na+ or low K+, while transgenic Arabidopsis exhibited tolerance to high Na+ and sensitivity to high K+, or high Na+ -low K+, confirming that Na+ tolerance in transgenic Arabidopsis depends on a sufficient external K+ concentration. Under external high Na+, high K+ and low K+ conditions, transgenic yeast accumulated more Na+ -K+, Na+ and K+, while transgenic Arabidopsis accumulated less Na+ -more K+, more Na+ and more Na+ -K+, respectively, indicating that the ion transport properties of RtHKT1 depend on the external Na+ -K+ environment. Salt stress induced up-regulation of some ion transporter genes (AtSOS1/AtHAK5/AtKUP5-6), as well as down-regulation of some genes (AtNHX1/AtAVP1/AtKUP9-12), revealing that multi-ion-transporter synergism maintains Na+ /K+ homeostasis under salt stress in transgenic Arabidopsis. Overexpression of RtHKT1 enhanced K+ accumulation and prevented Na+ transport from roots to shoots, improved biomass accumulation and Chl content in salt-stressed transgenic Arabidopsis. The proline content and relative water content increased significantly, and some proline biosynthesis genes (AtP5CS1 and AtP5CS2) were also up-regulated in salt-stressed transgenic plants. These results suggest that RtHKT1 confers salt tolerance on transgenic Arabidopsis by maintaining Na+ /K+ homeostasis and osmotic homeostasis.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]