Plant Physiol.
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Plant Physiology 100:1224-1229 (1992)
© 1992 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Environmental and Stress Physiology

Modulation of Na+/H+ Antiporter Activity by Extreme pH and Salt in the Halotolerant Alga Dunaliella salina

Adriana Katz, Uri Pick and Mordhay Avron1

Department of Biochemistry, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel

The effect of different growth conditions on the activity of the Na+/H+ antiporter in Dunaliella salina has been investigated. Adaptation of D. salina cells to ammonia at alkaline pH or to high NaCl concentrations is associated with a pronounced increase in the plasma membrane Na+/H+ exchange activity. The enhanced activity is manifested both in vivo, by stimulation of Na+ influx into intact cells in response to internal acidification, and in vitro, by a larger 22Na accumulation in plasma membrane vesicles in response to an induced pH gradient. Kinetic analysis shows that the stimulation does not result from a change of the Km for Na+ but from an increase in the Vmax. In contrast, adaptation of cells to a high LiCl concentration (0.8 M) depresses the activity of the Na+/H+ antiporter. Adaptation to ammonia is also associated with a large increase of three polypeptide bands in purified plasma membrane preparations, indicating that they may compose the antiporter polypeptides. These results suggest that adaptation to ammonia or to high salinity induces overproduction of the plasma membrane Na+/H+ antiporter in Dunaliella.


1 Professor Avron, the motivator and inspirer of this research, died on March 29, 1991.




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Copyright © 1992 by the American Society of Plant Biologists