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Plant Physiol, April 2000, Vol. 122, pp. 1387-1398
Enhancement of Na+ Uptake Currents, Time-Dependent
Inward-Rectifying K+ Channel Currents, and K+
Channel Transcripts by K+ Starvation in Wheat Root
Cells1
Peter H.
Buschmann,
Rama
Vaidyanathan,
Walter
Gassmann,2 and
Julian I.
Schroeder*
Department of Biology and Center for Molecular Genetics, University
of California at San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093-0116
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ABSTRACT |
Excessive
low-affinity Na+ uptake is toxic to the growth of
glycophytic plants. Recently, several reports have suggested that the
interaction between K+ and Na+ uptake might
represent a key factor in determining the Na+ tolerance of
plants. We investigated the effects of K+ starvation on
Na+ and K+ uptake mechanisms in the plasma
membrane of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) root cortex
cells using the patch-clamp technique. Unexpectedly, K+
starvation of wheat seedlings was found to enhance the magnitude and
frequency of occurrence of time-dependent inward-rectifying K+ channel currents
(IK+in). We examined whether the
transcription of a wheat root K+in channel gene
is induced by K+ starvation. A cDNA coding for a wheat root
K+ channel homolog, TaAKT1 (accession no.
AF207745), was isolated. TaAKT1 mRNA levels were
up-regulated in roots in response to withdrawal of K+ from
the growth medium. Furthermore, K+ starvation caused an
enhancement of instantaneous Na+ currents
(INa+). Electrophysiological analyses suggested
that IK+in and
INa+ are not mediated by the same transport
protein based on: (a) different activation curves, (b) different time
dependencies, (c) different sensitivities to external Ca2+,
and (d) different cation selectivities. These data implicate a role for
INa+ in Na+ uptake and stress
during K+ starvation, and indicate that
K+in channels may contribute to
K+-starvation-induced K+ uptake in wheat roots.
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INTRODUCTION |
The sensitivity of crop plants toward salinity is one of the major
factors causing agricultural losses in arid regions (Greenway and
Munns, 1980 ; Maas 1986 ). Studies analyzing the mechanisms of salinity
have shown specific toxic effects of Na+ ions
(Kingsbury and Epstein, 1986 ). Under saline conditions, the large
electrochemical Na+ gradient results in passive
Na+ uptake into root cells (Smith and Walker,
1989 ; Allen et al., 1995 ; Tyerman and Skerrett, 1999 ). Long-term
Na+ influx by Na+-permeable
channels/transporters can elevate the cytoplasmic
Na+ concentration to toxic levels and trigger a
variety of detrimental cellular effects (for review, see Volkmar et
al., 1999 ). Kinetic analyses of low-affinity Na+
uptake show multiple phases with distinguishable low-affinity components, leading to the suggestion that multiple low-affinity Na+ uptake pathways exist in roots (Epstein and
Rains, 1965 ).
Several ion transport and channel currents have been described in wheat
(Triticum aestivum L.) root cells, including an
outward-rectifying K+ channel current
(IK+out)
(Schachtman et al., 1991 ), inward-rectifying K+
channel currents
(IK+in)
(Findlay et al., 1994 ; Gassmann and Schroeder, 1994 ), a spiky inward K+ channel (Findlay et al., 1994 ), an
aluminum-activated anion channel current (Ryan et al., 1997 ), and a
Na+-dependent instantaneous current (Tyerman et
al., 1997 ). Only the spiky
K+ current and the
Na+-dependent current were shown to carry
Na+ uptake currents (Tyerman et al.,
1997 ). In contrast to animal cells, no specific
Na+ channel has been isolated in plants so far.
Inward Na+ channel in root cells have also been reported
from other species (for review, see Amtmann and Sanders, 1998 ;
Tyerman and Skerrett, 1999 ). Several non-selective cation channels
from rye root plasma membrane have been characterized in lipid
bilayers, and one of these might be responsible for instantaneous
currents measured in protoplasts of epidermal rye root cells (White and Lemtiri-Chlieh, 1995 ; White 1997 ). A
Na+-permeable channel was characterized in
protoplasts of maize root cortical cells (Roberts and Tester, 1997 ). In
barley suspension-cultured cells, instantaneously activating
inward-rectifying currents that were permeable to
Na+ and K+ were identified
(Amtmann et al., 1997 ). From guard cells of two Aster
species, non-rectifying cation channels that possess similar characteristics as the Na+-dependent inward
currents from roots have been reported (Véry et al., 1998 ).
Several earlier studies reported that K+
starvation induces increased low-affinity Na+
uptake (Pitman, 1967 ; Pitman et al., 1968 ; Ding and Zhu, 1997 ) and
low-affinity K+ uptake (Pitman et al., 1968 ;
Benlloch et al., 1989 ; Maathuis and Sanders, 1995 ). In addition,
K+ starvation has been shown to reduce the
selectivity of root membranes for K+ over
Na+ (Pitman et al., 1968 ; Kochian et al., 1985 ).
Enhancement of mRNA levels by K+ starvation was
also found for the high-affinity K+ transporters
HKT1 in barley, wheat, and rice (Golldack et al., 1997 ; Wang
et al., 1998 ), HvHAK1 in barley (Santa-Maria et al., 1997 ),
and AtKUP3 in Arabidopsis (Kim et al., 1998 ). Interestingly, these K+ transporters have been shown to mediate
low-affinity Na+ uptake under saline conditions
(Rubio et al., 1995 ; Gassmann et al., 1996 ; Santa-Maria et al., 1997 ;
Fu and Luan, 1998 ).
The characterization of K+ channels proposed to
contribute to low-affinity K+ uptake is far more
advanced than for the pathways of low-affinity Na+ uptake. Plant inward-rectifying
K+ channels have been cloned from Arabidopsis and
potato (Sentenac et al., 1992 ; for review, see Schroeder et al., 1994 ;
Fox and Guerinot, 1998 ; Czempinski et al., 1999 ), but so far no
inward-rectifying K+ channel genes have been
characterized from wheat.
In the present study we addressed the question of whether
Na+ and K+ uptake currents
in wheat root cells are affected by external K+
supply during growth. We found that instantaneous Na+
currents and time-dependent
IK+in
are enhanced by K+ starvation. In addition, we
observed a correlation between induced IK+in
and the induction of an isolated wheat root K+
channel gene.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Isolation of the TaAKT1 cDNA
A wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) root-specific cDNA
library constructed from wheat plants grown under
K+ starvation conditions (Schachtman and
Schroeder, 1994 ) was used as template DNA for PCR using the following
primers: 5'-TG GAA TTC ATG YTI MGI YTI TGG MG-3' as the forward primer
and 5'-ATR ACC WSI TAI TGI TG CCT AGG AA-3' as the reverse primer where
M represents A or C; R: A or G; S: C or G; W: A or T; Y: C or T; and I:
inosine triphosphate. The resulting 270-bp PCR fragment, which was
cloned and sequenced, shared homology to plant K+
channels. With this PCR product as a probe, the wheat root cDNA library
was screened to identify 16 putative clones. The cDNA with the largest
insert size, named TaAKT1, was used for further studies. The
TaAKT1 cDNA was sequenced on both strands with an automatic
sequencer (ABI, Sunnyvale, CA). Sequence analysis was performed with
Lasergene 99 software from DNASTAR (Madison, WI). Homologous sequences
were identified by searching within the GenBank database using BLAST
(Altschul et al., 1990 ). The amino acid sequence was analyzed with the
SMART program (Schultz et al., 1998 ). Putative transmembrane spans were
predicted by the TopPred2 program (von Heijne, 1992 ).
RNA Isolation and Reverse Transcriptase (RT)-PCR Analysis of TaAKT1
Expression
Total RNA was isolated from wheat roots grown hydroponically in
either 1 mM CaCl2 and 0 mM KCl or 1 mM CaCl2 and
5 mM KCl, as described below. Total RNA was quantitated
spectrophotometrically. Dilutions of the RNA were electrophoresed on an
RNA formaldehyde gel, and the intensity of the rRNA bands was compared
to confirm that equal quantities of RNA were taken for first-strand
cDNA syntheses. First-strand cDNA was synthesized from 5 µg of total RNA with a first-strand cDNA synthesis kit (Amersham-Pharmacia Biotech,
Uppsala), diluted 1:10, and used as the template for the PCR reaction.
For competitive PCR analyses, a PCR fragment was amplified from wheat
genomic DNA using the same primer pair as for the RT-PCR. Due to the
presence of introns, this fragment was 900 bp longer than the fragment
amplified from the cDNA. Ten to 600 fg of competitive DNA was added to
the PCR reactions, and 30 cycles of 94°C, 30 s; 60°C, 30 s; and 72°C, 1 min were performed. PCR products were analyzed by
agarose gel electrophoresis. To confirm the results, total RNA was
isolated from another set of plants grown under the same conditions and
the RT-PCR experiment was repeated.
Growth of Plants and Protoplast Preparation
Wheat (cv Atlas 66) seeds were surface-sterilized with 0.5%
(w/v) NaOCl, germinated on wetted filter paper for 4 d in
the dark, and then transferred to hydroponic solutions containing either 1 mM CaCl2 and 0 mM KCl or 1 mM CaCl2 and
5 mM KCl. After 5 to 7 d, protoplasts were isolated as
described by Schachtman et al. (1991) . About 1 g of root tissue
was chopped, washed, and then enzymatically digested in 0.8%
(w/v) cellulase (Onozuka RS, Yakult Honsha, Tokyo) and 0.08%
(w/v) pectolyase (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis) for 3 to 4 h. Root protoplasts were collected by a Suc density gradient. Large
protoplasts with visible cytoplasmic streaming were selected for patch
clamping. Previous studies have shown that protoplasts greater than 30 µm in diameter originate predominantly from the root cortex (Tyerman
et al., 1997 ).
Electrophysiology
Patch-clamp pipettes were pulled from glass capillaries (Kimax 51, Kimble, Toledo, OH) on a multistage puller (P-87, Sutter Instrument,
Novato, CA) and fire-polished to a tip resistance of 5 to 10 M .
Whole-cell currents across wheat root protoplasts were measured using
the patch-clamp technique (Hamill et al., 1981 ) with an amplifier
(Axopatch-1D, Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA). pClamp software (Axon
Instruments) was used for the generation of voltage pulses, data
recording, data storage, and data analysis. Patching of protoplasts was
performed in a flow chamber of about 0.2-mL volume. To minimize offset
potentials, agar salt bridges were used for the reference electrode.
Ionic activities were calculated and corrected using GEOCHEM software (D.R. Parker, University of California, Riverside). Liquid junction potentials were calculated and corrected using JPCalc software (Barry,
1994 ). Data are presented as means ± SE, and the
statistical significance of differences between currents was determined
by the Student's t test.
Experimental Solutions
The standard intracellular solution used in patch-clamp
experiments was composed of: 30 mM KCl, 70 mM
K-Glu, 2 mM MgCl2, 6.7 mM
EGTA, 3.35 mM CaCl2, 5 mM
MgATP, and 10 mM
4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid (HEPES)/Tris, pH
7.1. The standard bath solutions contained: 100 mM KCl, 10 mM CaCl2, 2 mM
MgCl2, 5 mM
2-(N-morpholino)-ethanesulfonic acid (MES)/Tris, pH 5.6 (standard
K+ solution), or 50 mM
Na2SO4, 2 mM
MgCl2, 0.05 mM
CaCl2, and 5 mM MES/Tris, pH 5.6 (standard Na+ solution).
In addition, low-Cl intracellular and
extracellular solutions were used in some experiments to exclude
possible Cl efflux currents. These solutions
included: (a) low-Cl intracellular solution:
100 mM K-Glu, 2 mM MgCl2,
2 mM EGTA, 5 mM MgATP, and 5 mM
HEPES/BTP, pH 7.1; (b) K-Glu extracellular solution: 100 mM
K-Glu, 10 mM CaCl2, 2 mM
MgCl2, and 10 mM MES/Tris, pH 5.8;
and (c) Na-Glu extracellular solution: 100 mM Na-Glu, 2 mM MgCl2, 0.05 mM
CaCl2, 10 mM MES/Tris, pH 5.8. For
selectivity examinations, the following solutions were used: 100 mM LiCl, 100 mM RbCl, or 100 mM
CsCl, plus 2 mM MgCl2, 0.05 mM CaCl2, and 10 mM
MES/Tris, pH 5.8. Sorbitol was used to adjust the osmolality of the
bath solutions to 625 mOsmol/kg and the pipette solutions to 650 mOsmol/kg.
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RESULTS |
Enhancement of IK+in by
K+ Starvation
In previous studies on wheat root cortex protoplasts from plants
grown with regular K+ supply (Schachtman et al.,
1991 ; Findlay et al., 1994 ; Tyerman et al., 1997 ),
IK+out
were more frequently observed (79%) than
IK+in
(23%). We examined K+ currents in wheat roots
grown under K+ starvation conditions (hydroponics
with 1 mM CaCl2 and 0 mM
KCl) and found
IK+in
in 91% of the protoplasts (Fig. 1A) and
IK+out
in only 45% (n = 101 total
protoplasts). Patch-clamp experiments in which the extracellular
K+ concentration was shifted from 100 to 30 mM followed by current reversal ("tail")
analyses showed that
IK+in
were carried by K+ (data not shown) and had
similar properties to the
IK+in
previously described by Findlay et al. (1994) . The increased frequency
of
IK+in
under K+-starved conditions suggested an effect
of the growth conditions on the K+ channel
activity. We tested different K+-supplemented
growth solutions with regard to their effect on IK+in.
In general, we found a reduction of
IK+in
occurrences and magnitudes for wheat root protoplasts grown with
K+.
IK+out
were observed in 79% of the protoplasts and
IK+in
in only 54% of the measured root protoplasts grown with 1 to 5 mM K+ (n = 56 total protoplasts). The average magnitude of
IK+in
from K+-starved root protoplasts was higher
( 19.96 ± 1.60 pA/pF at 148 mV, n = 18) than
the average magnitude of
IK+in
from K+-pretreated root protoplasts ( 9.85 ± 1.39 pA/pF at 148 mV, n = 11; only protoplasts
with
IK+in
were included for this analysis). The effect of adding 5 mM K+ to the growth medium,
enzyme solution, and protoplast storage solution is shown in Figure 1,
A through C (Fig. 1C, P < 0.001 at 148 mV).
Interestingly, for 6-d-old wheat seedlings grown in 1 mM CaCl2 and 5 mM KCl, the root/shoot length ratio was about one-half the value of seedlings grown in 1 mM
CaCl2 and 0 mM KCl.

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Figure 1.
Whole-cell K+in currents
in the plasma membrane of wheat root cortex protoplasts are enhanced by
K+ starvation during growth. A, Whole-cell currents from a
wheat root cortical cell grown 6 d in 1 mM
CaCl2 and 0 mM KCl (capacitance = 30 pF).
B, Whole-cell currents from a wheat root cortical cell grown for 6 d in 1 mM CaCl2 and 5 mM KCl
(capacitance = 34 pF). C, Average current-voltage relationships of
whole-cell currents from wheat root cortical cells grown for 6 d
in 1 mM CaCl2 and 0 mM KCl ( ,
n = 11) or in 1 mM CaCl2
and 5 mM KCl ( , n = 8). Means ± SE of time-dependent currents obtained by voltage pulses
from +60 to 160 mV in 20 mV steps are shown in C. The holding
potential was 30 mV. A standard K+ bath solution and a
standard pipette solution were used.
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Further control experiments were performed with a
low-Cl pipette solution (see "Material and
Methods") to exclude the possibility that inward-rectifying anion
currents (Ryan et al., 1997 ) contributed to
IK+in.
We could not observe a significant difference in the kinetics (e.g.
Fig. 6A) or current density of
IK+in
in response to the changed pipette solution (standard pipette solution:
19.4 ± 1.6 pA/pF at 148 mV, n = 11;
low-Cl pipette solution: 19.6 ± 2.8 pA/pF at 148 mV, n = 8).
Cloning of the TaAKT1 Gene and K+-Dependent mRNA
Levels
The inward-rectifying K+ channel AKT1 plays
a role in K+ uptake from roots, as evidenced by
its preferential localization in roots (Lagarde et al., 1996 ) and
reduced root growth in Arabidopsis mutants disrupted in the
AKT1 gene under low-K+ and
high-NH4+ conditions
(Hirsch et al., 1998 ). However, there was no induction of
AKT1 RNA levels by low-K+ conditions
in Brassica napus roots (Lagarde et al., 1996 ). To examine
whether a K+ uptake channel gene is induced by
K+ starvation in wheat, we first cloned a wheat
homolog of the Arabidopsis AKT1 channel gene. Degenerate PCR primers
were based on the sequence MLRLWR in the S4 domain for the forward
primer and on the sequence YWSITT in the pore domain of
K+in channels for the
reverse primer. These primers were used to amplify a fragment from a
K+-starved wheat root cDNA library (Schachtman
and Schroeder, 1994 ) that showed homology to the corresponding region
of AKT1. The PCR product was used as a probe to screen the
wheat root cDNA library. A full-length cDNA of 3,300 bp (accession no.
AF207745), encoding a deduced polypeptide of 897 amino acids, having a
predicted molecular mass of 100.9 kD, and showing 76% similarity to
the Arabidopsis AKT1 sequence (Sentenac et al., 1992 ), 84% similarity to a K+ channel cDNA from maize (accession no.
Y07632), and 77% to SKT1 from potato (Zimmermann et al., 1998 ) at the
amino acid level, was isolated. The deduced polypeptide exhibited all
of the structural features that are shared by the plant
inward-rectifying K+ channels: six transmembrane
domains (S1-S6) (Uozumi et al., 1998 ), a
K+-selective pore-forming domain (P) between S5
and S6, a putative cyclic nucleotide-binding domain, and five ankyrin
repeat sequences that are present only in the AKT subfamily of
plant inward-rectifying K+ channels (Sentenac et
al., 1992 ). We therefore designated this gene TaAKT1
(T. aestivum AKT1-like) (Fig.
2).

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Figure 2.
Predicted amino acid sequence of
TaAKT1. Transmembrane segments S1 to S6, pore region P, and
the putative cyclic nucleotide binding site cNMP are underlined and
labeled below the respective sequence; ankyrin-like repeats A1 to A5
are boxed. The protein sequence on which degenerate PCRs were based is
boxed.
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Since standard northern-blot experiments did not give us a clear signal
with the TaAKT1 probe, we performed RT-PCR experiments with
TaAKT1-specific primers to determine whether the TaAKT1 gene was
induced by K+ starvation in wheat roots.
Fragments of the expected size were detected in both
K+-starved (Fig.
3B) and 5 mM
K+-grown roots (Fig. 3A). Figure 3C shows the
amount of RNA used for the first-strand cDNA synthesis. To analyze the
level of induction of the TaAKT1 transcript, we used the
wheat cDNA together with different amounts of competitor DNA in PCR
reactions. The comparison of the band intensity indicates a 3- to
10-fold induction in the TaAKT1 message in replicate
experiments in wheat roots grown at K+-starved
conditions (Fig. 3).

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Figure 3.
Enhancement of TaAKT1 mRNA levels
in response to K+ deprivation. Total RNA extracted from
wheat roots grown in 1 mM CaCl2 and 5 mM KCl (+K+ in A) or in 1 mM
CaCl2 and 0 mM KCl ( K+ in B) was
used for first-strand cDNA synthesis and subsequent PCR reactions. C
shows the quantity of total RNA from K+-starved
( K+) and K+-grown (+K+) wheat
roots used for first-strand cDNA synthesis. Total RNA electrophoresed
on a formaldehyde gel was stained by ethidium bromide. For the
competitor DNA, a PCR-amplified fragment isolated from the genomic DNA
was used. This fragment was approximately 900 bp longer than the
cDNA-amplified fragment because of introns. The indicated amounts of
competitor DNA were added to the PCR reactions. Aliquots were analyzed
by agarose gel electrophoresis.
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In our studies, K+ starvation induced an
increased expression of TaAKT1, and patch-clamp studies also
showed an increased K+in
current in K+-starved wheat roots. AKT1 has been
shown to function as a K+in
channel in yeast (Bertl et al., 1997 ) and in insect cells (Gaymard et
al., 1996 ). Therefore, we propose that the TaAKT1 channel might contribute to induced
IK+in
in wheat root protoplasts.
Enhancement of INa+ by K+
Starvation
After exchanging the K+ bath solution with a
Na+-containing bath solution (100 mM
Na+), we found at low extracellular
Ca2+ concentrations (0.05 mM)
instantaneous inward-directed currents in root cortex protoplasts from
K+-starved wheat seedlings (Fig. 4;
n = 46 protoplasts). When roots and root protoplasts
were pretreated with K+, only reduced
instantaneous currents were observed (n = 21 protoplasts). Adding 5 mM KCl to the growth
medium, enzyme solution, and protoplast storage solution caused about a
3-fold decrease of the instantaneous currents (Fig.
4C; P < 0.01 at 147
mV). On the other hand, increasing the bath Na+
concentration from 100 to 180 mM
Na+ increased the current and shifted the
whole-cell reversal potential to more positive values (Fig. 4, C and D,
P < 0.05 at 147 mV). Control measurements with
low-Cl pipette solutions were performed to
exclude effects of inward-rectifying anion currents (n = 9). The time dependence of activation of the Na+-dependent currents (e.g. Fig. 6B) and the
current density were not affected by Cl ions
(standard pipette solution: 4.6 ± 0.6 pA/pF at 147 mV, n = 11; low-Cl pipette
solution: 4.3 ± 1.2 pA/pF at 147 mV, n = 9). We examined the selectivity of the instantaneous currents with
respect to monovalent cations. For Li+ and
Cs+ ions (100 mM), we found
only small background currents at hyperpolarized membrane potentials
(Fig. 5, A and C). When protoplasts were
extracellularly exposed to 100 mM
Rb+, we observed small time-dependent currents
that might have been mainly mediated by
IK+in
(data not shown). The positive shifts in reversal potentials upon
increasing extracellular Na+ concentration, the
Cl independence, and the reduction of clearly
resolved currents in the presence of Li+ or
Cs+ show that the observed instantaneous currents
were mainly carried by Na+ ions which were named
INa+.

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Figure 4.
K+ deprivation induces instantaneous
Na+ currents measured across the plasma membrane of
protoplasts isolated from the cortex of wheat roots. A, Whole-cell
currents from a K+-starved wheat root cortex cell measured
in a bath solution with 50 mM
Na2SO4, 2 mM MgCl2, and
0.05 CaCl2 (capacitance = 36pF). Wheat seedlings were
grown 6 d in 1 mM CaCl2. B, Whole-cell
currents from a 5 mM K+-grown wheat root cortex
cell measured in a bath solution with 50 mM
Na2SO4, 2 mM MgCl2, and
0.05 CaCl2 (capacitance = 52pF). Wheat seedlings were
grown 6 d in 1 mM CaCl2 and 5 mM KCl. C, Average current-voltage relationships of
whole-cell currents from wheat root cortex cells measured as in A and
B. Wheat seedlings were grown for 6 d in 1 mM
CaCl2 and 0 mM KCl ( , n = 11) or in 1 mM CaCl2 and 5 mM KCl
( , n = 11). D, Average current-voltage
relationships of whole-cell currents from wheat root cortex cells
measured in bath solution with 90 mM
Na2SO4, 2 mM MgCl2, and
0.05 CaCl2. Wheat seedlings were grown for 6 d in 1 mM CaCl2 and 0 mM KCl ( ,
n = 9) or in 1 mM CaCl2 and
5 mM KCl ( , n = 6). Holding
potential was 30 mV. Voltage pulses from +40 to 140 mV in 20 mV
steps were applied.
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Figure 5.
Alkali cation selectivity of instantaneous
whole-cell inward currents from wheat root protoplasts under low
external Ca2+ conditions (0.05 mM
CaCl2). A, Whole-cell currents from wheat root protoplasts
measured with 100 mM LiCl and 0.05 mM
CaCl2 in the bath solution and using standard pipette
solution (C = 65pF). B, Whole-cell currents from wheat root
protoplasts measured with 100 mM Na-Glu and 0.05 mM CaCl2 in the bath solution and standard
pipette solution (same protoplast as in 5A). C, Average steady-state
current-voltage relationships of whole-cell currents from wheat root
cortex cells measured in bath solutions with 100 mM
Na+ ( , n = 11), Cs+ (×,
n = 6), and Li+ ( ,
n = 5). Holding potential was 30 mV. Voltage
pulses from 0 to 140 mV in 20 mV steps were applied. Wheat seedlings
were grown for 6 d in 1 mM CaCl2.
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We pursued experiments to determine whether
INa+ was related to
IK+in.
The time dependencies of activation and deactivation of
IK+in
and INa+ were found to be
clearly different.
IK+in
showed a time-dependent activation characteristic for
K+in channels, whereas
INa+ activated with a major
rapid component (Fig. 6, B and C). In addition, the activation curve of
IK+in
could be well described by a Boltzmann curve, as reported for other
IK+in
in roots (e.g. White, 1997 ). In contrast, the conductance-voltage relationship for INa+ was
nearly linear (Fig. 6D). A similar conductance-voltage relationship for
Na+-dependent currents has been reported in maize roots
(Roberts and Tester, 1997 ). In addition, we found, in agreement with
other studies (Tyerman et al., 1997 ), that recordings of
INa+ were possible in
protoplasts without
IK+in
(n = 8). Furthermore,
IK+in,
but not INa+, could be
blocked by addition of 10 mM CsCl to the bath
solution. Thus, INa+ shared
several biophysical properties that could be clearly distinguished from
IK+in,
showing that different proteins account for the two currents.

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Figure 6.
Comparison of whole-cell K+- and
Na+-dependent inward currents from wheat root cortex cells.
A, Whole-cell currents from a wheat root protoplast measured with 100 mM K+ bath solution low-Cl
pipette solution (C = 65 pF). Voltage pulses from +20 to 160 mV
in 20 mV steps were applied. B, Whole-cell currents from a wheat root
protoplasts measured with Na-Glu bath solution and low-Cl
pipette solution (C = 31 pF). Voltage pulses from +40 to 140 mV
in 20 mV steps were applied. C, Average fast time constants of
activation for IK+in ( ,
n = 6) and INa+ ( ,
n = 5). D, Average steady-state chord conductance
as a function of membrane potential. The chord conductance density was
calculated as g = I/(EM EX), where I is the
steady-state inward current density, EM the
clamped membrane potential, and EX the
reversal potential of the inward currents. A Boltzmann equation of
the form g = gmax/(1+exp[{EM E1/2}/{RT/zgF}])
was fitted to the data, where gmax is
the maximal chord-conductance density, E1/2
is the voltage at which the chord conductance density is half-maximal,
R, T, and F have their
usual thermodynamic meanings, and zg is the
valency of the gating charge. Fitting was done by a simplex method. For
IK+in we obtained
gmax = 171.1 pS/pF,
E1/2 = 132.5 mV,
RT/zgF = 14.4 mV
(zg = 1.75). Holding potential was 30
mV. Wheat seedlings were grown for 6 d in 1 mM
CaCl2.
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Ca2+ is known to have ameliorative effects on
plants under high-salinity conditions (LaHaye and Epstein, 1969 ) and to
reduce low-affinity Na+ uptake (Rengel, 1992 ).
Therefore, we tested the effect of increased external
Ca2+ on
INa+. Protoplasts recorded
in the presence of 4 mM Ca2+ (Fig.
7A) showed reduced
INa+ in comparison with
INa+ recorded in the
presence of 0.05 mM Ca2+ (Fig. 7, B
and C, P < 0.02 at 147 mV). Reversibility of
Ca2+ reduction in
INa+ was tested next. When
the Na+ bath solution with 4 mM Ca2+ (Fig. 7A) was
exchanged by a Na+ bath solution with 0.05 mM Ca2+ (same protoplast),
the magnitude of INa+
increased (Fig. 7B, n = 2).

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Figure 7.
Reduction of INa+ from
wheat root protoplasts by increased external Ca2+
concentration. A, Whole-cell currents from a wheat root cortical cell
measured with 100 mM Na-Glu and 4 mM
CaCl2 bath solution and standard pipette solution (C = 50 pF). B, Whole-cell currents from the same protoplasts as in Figure
7A measured with 100 mM Na-Glu and 0.05 mM
CaCl2 bath solution and standard pipette solution. C,
Average current-voltage relationships of whole-cell currents from wheat
roots cortex cells measured with 100 mM Na-Glu and 4 mM CaCl2 ( , n = 5) or
0.05 mM CaCl2 ( , n = 6)
bath solution and standard pipette solution. Holding potential was 30
mV. Voltage pulses from +40 to 140 mV in 20 mV steps were applied.
Wheat seedlings were grown for 6 d in 1 mM
CaCl2.
|
|
Protein kinases and phosphatases are involved in the response to salt
stress in yeast and plant cells (Lee et al., 1999 ; Serrano et al.,
1999 ). We tested the effect of externally applied deltamethrin (2 nM), an inhibitor of type 2B protein phosphatases, and
okadaic acid (100 nM), an inhibitor of type 2A protein
phosphatases. In both cases we observed only small changes in the
current density of
IK+in
(not shown) or INa+
(standard Na+ bath solution: 4.6 ± 0.6 pA/pF at 147 mV, n = 11; standard Na+ bath solution with 2 nM
deltamethrin: 5.9 ± 1.1 pA/pF at 147 mV, n = 7; standard Na+ bath solution with 100 nM okadaic acid: 5.3 ± 0.8 pA/pF at 147 mV, n = 5).
 |
DISCUSSION |
Induction of K+ Currents and of TaAKT1 mRNA
Inward-rectifying K+ channels provide a pathway for
K+ uptake in root cells (see the introduction). In an
earlier study on wheat roots grown with regular K+ supply,
IK+in could be found in only 23%
(n = 184) of the protoplasts (Findlay et al.,
1994 ). Several explanations have been discussed, and it has been
suggested that the occurrence of
IK+in is limited to specific
locations in the root cortex. On the other hand, the outward-rectifying
K+ channel could be observed in 66% to 79% of the wheat
root protoplasts (Schachtman et al., 1991 ; Findlay et al., 1994 ). Here
we show that IK+in are induced by
K+ starvation. We found
IK+in in 91% and
IK+out in 45% of the
K+-starved wheat root protoplasts (n = 101 protoplasts). However, when protoplasts were pretreated with 5 mM K+ we observed
IK+in in 54% and
IK+out in 79% of the measured root
protoplasts (n = 56 protoplasts). In addition, the
K+-pretreated root protoplasts were found to have a
decreased magnitude of IK+in.
Interestingly, in a study on Arabidopsis root protoplasts low external
K+ supply also caused an enhanced activity of
IK+in (Maathuis and Sanders, 1995 ).
We examined the possibility that a K+ uptake
channel gene is induced by K+ starvation in wheat
roots. We isolated TaAKT1, a complementary DNA from wheat
that shows high sequence homology to the Arabidopsis inward-rectifying
K+ channel gene AKT1 (Sentenac et al.,
1992 ). The deduced polypeptide sequence of TaAKT1 shows the typical
features of the plant K+in
channels and animal shaker K+ channels. Each of
the four subunits of a functional K+ channel
consists of six transmembrane domains and a short hairpin segment
called the P loop that is located between S5 and S6 and determines the
selectivity of the pore. The AKT family of plant K+ uptake channels contain five ankyrin repeats
in their C-terminal halves, which might represent potential domains for
interactions of membrane proteins with the cytoskeleton, as has been
shown in animal cells (Sentenac et al., 1992 ; for review, see
Czempinsky et al., 1999 ).
Earlier models suggested that K+ absorption is
mediated by cotransporters at micromolar K+
concentrations and by channels at higher concentrations. The level of
the AKT1 gene in B. napus roots was unaffected by
external K+ concentrations, suggesting that AKT1
is a constitutive component of K+ uptake (Lagarde
et al., 1996 ). On the other hand, models have been proposed in
which K+in
channels could contribute to both low- and high-affinity
K+ uptake (Hedrich and Schroeder, 1989 ; Gassmann
et al., 1993 ; Schroeder et al., 1994 ). AKT1 expression in yeast
(Sentenac et al., 1992 ) and native expression in
Arabidopsis roots (Hirsch et al., 1998 ; Spalding et al., 1999 ) have
demonstrated that AKT1 can mediate high-affinity
K+ uptake at micromolar K+.
An Arabidopsis mutant disrupted in the AKT1 channel gene
showed reduced growth at 100 µM external
K+ when ammonium was added to the growth medium
(Hirsch et al., 1998 ). These results, together with the induction of
the TaAKT1 mRNA and
K+in in wheat roots by
K+ starvation, suggest that
K+in channels might be
involved not only in constitutive, but also in inducible,
K+ uptake in wheat roots.
INa+ in Wheat Root Cells
We studied a Na+-dependent inward current
found in a bath solution with high Na+ and low
Ca2+ concentrations.
INa+ have been reported in
previous studies. In wheat roots, Na+ currents
that show a fast-activating and a slow-activating component have been
described (Tyerman et al., 1997 ). It is likely that the instantaneous
currents reported here are related to these currents, although a
comparison is complicated by the use of different varieties of wheat,
different growth conditions, and the fact that in the previous study
all Na+ bath solutions contained 10 mM KCl. Under the conditions reported here, we found that
the magnitude of INa+ from
K+-starved wheat root cortex protoplasts was
about 3-fold enhanced compared with protoplasts from
K+-supplemented roots. This increase in
INa+ could be mediated by
transcriptional regulation and/or by post-translational modification.
Previous studies reported that Na+-dependent
inward currents from different root plasma membranes are insensitive to
the K+ channel blockers Cs+
(up to 10 mM), TEA+ (up to 20 mM), and TTX+ (up to 50 µM) (Roberts and Tester, 1997 ; Tyerman and Skerrett, 1999 ). Tyerman et al. (1997) determined permeability ratios of Na+-dependent currents in wheat root protoplasts
showing a relatively low whole-cell
PK+/PNa+ (approximately
1.7:1). In addition, Cs+ ions were found to be
more permeable than Na+ ions. As pointed out
previously (Tyerman et al., 1997 ), whole-cell reversal potentials of
relatively small INa+
provide only approximate permeability ratio values, because proton ATPases hyperpolarize root cells and other background conductances are included. Under the K+ starvation conditions
used here, we found a
K+/Na+ permeability ratio
of about 2.6 and a Cs+/Na+
permeability ratio of about 0.12 based on shifts in the whole-cell reversal potential. It is possible that the previously described Na+-dependent currents (Tyerman et al., 1997 ) and
K+-starvation-induced
INa+ are mediated by
different transport proteins, or that under these different conditions
several channels/transporters make different relative contributions to
an observed whole-cell
INa+.
Ca2+ is known to have ameliorative effects on
plants under high-salinity conditions (LaHaye and Epstein, 1969 ;
Greenway and Munns, 1980 ; Rengel, 1992 ). In agreement with previous
Na+ flux measurements (Allen et al., 1995 ;
Davenport et al., 1997 ) and patch-clamp studies (White and
Lemtiri-Chlieh, 1995 ; Roberts and Tester, 1997 ; Tyerman et al., 1997 ),
we found a suppression of
INa+ by high external
Ca2+ concentrations. The correlation between the
protective effect of external Ca2+ under
high-salinity conditions for the whole plant and the suppression of
Na+ uptake by Ca2+
indicates a physiological role for these
Na+-dependent currents in salt stress. Note that
the Na+ uptake rate into the roots of a
salt-sensitive wheat species and a salt-tolerant wheat species did not
differ significantly (Davenport et al., 1997 ), suggesting that
Na+ tolerance is mediated by other mechanisms.
Protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation constitute a general
mechanism by which plant cells regulate cellular mechanisms in response
to changes in the extracellular environment (Stone and Walker, 1995 ;
Luan, 1998 ). Several protein kinases and phosphatases are involved in
the response to salt stress in yeast and plant cells (Lee et al., 1999 ;
Serrano et al., 1999 ). In Arabidopsis, the SOS3 gene was
found to exhibit sequence similarity to the Ca2+-binding domain of a 2B-type protein
phosphatase. Recessive sos3 mutants show a
Ca2+-dependent reduction in high-affinity
K+ uptake and hypersensitivity to NaCl stress
(Liu and Zhu, 1998 ). We found small effects of externally applied
phosphatase inhibitors deltamethrin (2 nM) and
okadaic acid (100 nM) on
INa+ under the imposed
conditions, and further studies will be pursued.
Candidate Molecular Mechanisms and Physiological Roles of
Na+ Currents
Thus far, the Na+-dependent currents in
plant root cells have not been directly linked to specific genes or
proteins, but several candidate genes have been characterized. It is
possible that channels/transporters, which under non-saline conditions
mediate the transport of other ions, become Na+
permeable under saline conditions (Khakh and Lester, 1999 ). This possibility has also been examined for
K+in channels. In several
studies it was found that
IK+in
are highly selective for K+ over
Na+, and therefore are not likely to
represent Na+ uptake pathways (Gassmann and
Schroeder, 1994 ; Tyerman et al., 1997 ; Amtmann and Sanders, 1998 ).
However, some of the recently isolated cation uptake transporters could
be involved in Na+ uptake (for review, see
Schachtman and Liu, 1999 ). The K+ transporter
HKT1 is rapidly induced at the transcriptional level in wheat and
barley roots by K+ starvation (Wang et al., 1998 )
and mediates low-affinity Na+ uptake in oocytes
and in yeast (Rubio et al., 1995 ). In addition, the voltage dependence,
time dependence, and cation selectivity of
INa+ show correlations to
HKT1-mediated low-affinity Na+ currents. However,
HKT1-mediated low-affinity Na+ currents were
reported to be insensitive to external Ca2+ in
Xenopus oocytes (Tyerman and Skerrett, 1999 ). The absence of
HKT1 modulation by Ca2+ in oocytes does not
exclude the possibility of Ca2+ regulation of
HKT1 in plants via post-translational mechanisms, as recent research
suggests that Ca2+ regulation is mediated by
phosphorylation/dephosphorylation (Liu and Zhu, 1998 ).
Other channels/transporters may also contribute to
INa+. Recently, a
non-specific cation channel NSC1 that is regulated by Ca2+ was found in yeast (Bihler et al., 1998 ),
but the underlying gene remains unknown. LCT1 (Schachtman et al.,
1997 ), AtKUP1 (Fu and Luan, 1998 ; Kim et al., 1998 ), and HvHAK1
(Santa-Maria et al., 1997 ) have also been shown to mediate low-affinity
Na+ uptake in yeast. The low-affinity
Na+ transport capabilities of these transporters
seemed to be lower than HKT1 under the imposed conditions in yeast.
Electrophysiological recordings of
INa+ via LCT1, AtKUP1, and
HvHAK1 have not yet been reported, and therefore a comparison to
INa+ in root cells is not
yet possible.
Single-channel currents that can account for the
Na+-dependent whole-cell currents have been
reported (Roberts and Tester, 1997 ; Tyerman et al., 1997 ; White, 1997 ).
In animal systems it was discovered in recent years that transporters
also can exhibit channel behavior, and that the classical distinction
between transporters and channels does not always hold at the molecular
level (Fairman et al., 1995 ; Cammack and Schwartz, 1996 ; Lin et al.,
1996 ; Sonders and Amara, 1996 ; Su et al., 1996 ). As discussed
previously, it seems likely that plant transporters such as AtKUPs and
HKT1 could show channel conductance states (Gassmann et al., 1996 ; Fu
and Luan, 1998 ; Chrispeels et al., 1999 , Durell et al., 1999 ). Further research is needed to directly identify the different membrane channel/transporter genes contributing to inward-directed
Na+ currents in root cells.
The physiological role of Na+ uptake has been the
subject of discussion, because Na+ is not
essential for most plants and excessive low-affinity
Na+ uptake can result in toxic cytoplasmic
Na+ concentrations. Our results, together with
other studies (Pitman et al., 1968 ; Zhu et al., 1998 ), suggest that the
availability of K+ in the growth medium is a
crucial parameter in inducing Na+ uptake. The
recent findings that high-affinity K+ uptake
transporters are induced by K+ starvation, and
that these transporters also mediate low-affinity Na+ uptake provide a possible model for the
inducibility of INa+
reported here. Another non-exclusive explanation would be that low-affinity Na+ uptake pathways are activated in
K+-starved plants, because the plants can to a
certain degree compensate K+ deficiency by
Na+ uptake (Mengel and Kirkby, 1982 ; Flowers and
Läuchli, 1983 ; Rodriguez-Navarro, 2000 ). Further research should
allow the establishment of relative contributions of individual genes
responsible for Na+ uptake and
INa+ induced by
K+ starvation. Furthermore, the finding that both
IK+in and TaAKT1 mRNA
are induced by K+ starvation indicates that
K+in channels may
contribute to both constitutive and inducible K+
uptake in wheat roots.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENT |
We thank Pascal Mäser for useful discussions and critical
reading of the manuscript.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received September 10, 1999; accepted December 20, 1999.
1
This work was supported by the U.S. Department
of Agriculture (grant no. 98-353-04-6684 to J.I.S.), in part by the
Department of Energy (grant no. 94-ER-20148 to J.I.S.), and by a
postdoctoral fellowship of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
(P.H.B.).
2
Present address: Department of Plant Biology,
111 Koshland Hall, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-3102.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail julian{at}biomail.ucsd.edu; fax
858-534-7108.
 |
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Genetic analysis of salt tolerance in Arabidopsis: evidence for a critical role of potassium nutrition.
Plant Cell
10: 1181-1191
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
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Zimmermann S, Talke I, Ehrhardt T, Nast G, Müller-Röber B
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Characterization of SKT1, an inwardly rectifying potassium channel from potato, by heterologous expression in insect cells.
Plant Physiol
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[Abstract/Free Full Text]
© 2000 American Society of Plant Physiologists
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