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Plant Physiol, April 2000, Vol. 122, pp. 1447-1456
The Sucrose Transporter of Celery. Identification and Expression
during Salt Stress1
Nathalie
Noiraud,
Serge
Delrot, and
Rémi
Lemoine*
Laboratoire de Physiologie et Biochimie Végétales,
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique Equipe Supérieure
Associée 6161, 40, Avenue du Recteur Pineau, F-86022
Poitiers cedex, France
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ABSTRACT |
In celery (Apium
graveolens L.), long-distance transport of reduced carbon
occurs both in the form of sucrose (Suc) and mannitol. The presence of
mannitol has been related to the resistance of celery to salt stress.
To investigate the transport events occurring during salt stress, we
have cloned the H+/Suc transporter of celery AgSUT1
(A. graveolens Suc uptake transport 1) from a mature
leaf cDNA library. The function of the encoded protein was confirmed by
expression in yeast. AgSUT1 is a H+/Suc transporter with a
high affinity for Suc (Km of 139 µM). Another closely related cDNA (AgSUT2)
was also identified. AgSUT1 is mainly expressed in
mature leaves and phloem of petioles, but also in sink organs such as
roots. When celery plants were subjected to salt stress conditions (30 d watering with 300 mM NaCl) favoring mannitol accumulation
(J.D. Everard, R. Gucci, S.C. Kann, J.A. Flore, W.H. Loescher [1994]
Plant Physiol 106: 281-292), AgSUT1 expression was
decreased in all organs, but markedly in roots. The results are
discussed in relation to the physiology of celery.
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INTRODUCTION |
Plants are autotrophic organisms using the energy of light through
photosynthesis to reduce ambient CO2 to
carbohydrates and other compounds. Plant organs are specialized into
source (producers and exporters of sugars) and sink (importers and
users of sugars) organs. Sugars are generally transported in the form
of Suc (see below) from source to sink organs by mass flow into
specialized cells of the phloem called the sieve tubes. This so-called
"long-distance" transport of sugar is therefore an important
determinant of plant productivity (Gifford and Evans, 1981 ).
In many species, the high Suc concentration measured in the phloem sap
(Winter et al., 1994 ) compared with surrounding cells has led to the
model of an active transport of Suc into the sieve element/companion
cell complex from the apoplasmic space. This model has received
confirmation after the cloning of a cDNA encoding a
H+/Suc carrier from spinach (SoSUT1:
Spinacia oleracea Suc uptake transport 1; Riesmeier et al.,
1992 ), potato (StSUT1: Solanum tuberosum SUT1;
Riesmeier et al., 1993 ), and then many species (for review, see
Lemoine, 2000 ). The localization of the carrier to plasma
membranes of sieve elements (Kühn et al., 1997 ) and companion cells (Truernit et al., 1995 ) and the impairment of Suc
export from leaves of plants where the expression of the Suc carrier
was lowered (Riesmeier et al., 1994; Bürkle et al., 1998 ) demonstrated the involvement of SUT carriers in the loading of Suc in
the sieve element/companion cell complex.
In a significant number of species, Suc is transported in parallel with
other types of sugars such as oligosaccharides (e.g. raffinose and
trehalose in cucurbits; Turgeon, 1996 ) and polyols (mainly mannitol and
sorbitol). Polyols (or sugar alcohols) are the reduced form of
-ketoses and are found in more than 100 species (Stoop et al.,
1996 ). The derivatives of Glc (sorbitol or dulcitol) and Man (mannitol)
are the most frequently found polyols. It has been calculated that up
to 30% of the carbon fixed by plants on earth is in the form of
polyols (Bieleski, 1982 ). The exact function of the polyols is still
unknown, but their presence has been related to different events.
Mannitol has been implicated in the resistance to stress (mainly salt),
because its synthesis is increased in response to stress in celery
(Apium graveolens) (Everard et al., 1994 ). Mannitol, like
other polyols, is considered to be a compatible solute, accumulating in
stressed cells to increase their osmotic potential while protecting
cellular structures and activities. Seeds from Arabidopsis plants
engineered to produce mannitol showed an increased resistance to salt
stress (Thomas et al., 1995 ). In planta, mannitol is synthesized in the
cytoplasm of source leaves from photosynthesis-derived hexose phosphate
and exported to sink organs, presumably in the same way as Suc. Several
lines of evidence indicate that Suc and mannitol are transported by different carriers in celery (Daie, 1987 ; Salmon et al., 1995 ), but the
transport events in polyol-synthesizing species received little
attention except in Plantago major (Gahrtz et al., 1994 ), where sorbitol is also transported.
Salt stress has been studied extensively as soil salinity represents an
increasing problem for agriculture in many countries. Several species
are tolerant to salt and can still show some growth when cultivated on
soils containing high NaCl levels. For example, celery plants develop
new leaves when grown on a 300 mM NaCl solution, a salinity
equal to one-half that of seawater. Under such conditions, both in
plants (Everard et al., 1994 ) and cell cultures (Prata et al., 1997 ),
mannitol accumulation is the result of an increase in mannitol
synthesis at the expense of Suc and a decrease of mannitol catabolism.
However, the flux of sugar from source and to sink organs has not been
considered in such situations. Generally speaking, regulation of Suc
transporter expression has been rarely studied and very few reports are
available (see Delrot et al., 2000 ; Lalonde et al., 1999 ).
In this paper, we report the identification of Suc transporters from
celery, AgSUT1 and AgSUT2 (A. graveolens Suc uptake
transport 1 and 2) and the regulation of their expression during salt
stress. We demonstrate that in response to salt stress,
AgSUT1 expression is lowered in all organs but to different
extents. Those results are discussed in relation to the physiology of celery.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plant Material
Celery plants (Apium graveolens L. var dulce
cv Vert d'Elne) were grown under greenhouse conditions as described by
Davis et al. (1988) . Mature plants were approximately 4 months old. Prior to salt stress treatment, the open surfaces of 5.4-L pots containing the plants were covered with plastic film to minimize surface evaporation. Salt treatments were stepped up in 50 mM d 1 increments (25 mM in the morning, 25 mM in
the afternoon) until the desired final concentration (300 mM) was achieved. NaCl was dissolved in either
Peters 20:20:20 fertilizer (100 ppm nitrogen working strength) or tap
water. Plants were watered alternatively with each solution for 4 weeks. At the end of the 300 mM NaCl treatment,
half of the treated plants were watered for 1 week with tap water
without salt (rehydrated plants).
Strains
The following strains were used in this study. Escherichia
coli strains DH5 (supE44, lacU169
[ 80, lacZM15], hsdR17,
recA, endA1, gyrA96, thi-1,
and relA1), XL1Blue MRF' (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA), and
SOLR (Stratagene) were cultured according to standard techniques
(Sambrook et al., 1989 ). The yeast strain SUSY7 (suc2: :URA3, mal0, and trp1) expresses a potato
Suc synthase gene (Riesmeier et al., 1992 ).
Screening of cDNA Library and DNA Manipulations
The source leaf cDNA library in ZAP II was a generous gift from
Prof. W.H. Loescher (Everard et al., 1997 ). Recombinant phages (750,000) were screened using SoSUT1 as a radioactive probe
according to the manufacturer's protocols (Stratagene). Hybond-N nylon
filters (Amersham, Les Ulis, France) were hybridized overnight at
42°C according to standard conditions (Stratagene). Filters were
washed 15 min at 42°C with 0.1% (w/v) SDS and 2× SSC (1×
SSC = 0.15 M NaCl and 0.015 M sodium citrate), 15 min at 50°C with 0.1%
(w/v) SDS and 2× SSC, and 30 min at 50°C with 0.1%
(w/v) SDS and 1× SSC. In vivo excision was performed on the
eight clones that gave positive signals during the three rounds of screening.
The cDNAs were sequenced using an automated sequencer (ABI 310, Perkin-Elmer, Foster City, CA). Sequence comparisons with other
databases were performed through the National Center for Biotechnology
Information via the BLAST site (Altschul et al., 1997 ). Transmembrane
regions and protein orientation were predicted using the TMpred tool
(Hofmann and Stoffel, 1993 ).
Expression of AgSUT1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
AgSUT1 cDNA was ligated into the
EcoRI-XhoI site of the yeast shuttle vector
YEP112A1XE (Riesmeier et al., 1992 ). This vector allows expression of
full-length cDNAs under the control of the S. cerevisiae
ADH1 promoter. Competent yeast cells were prepared and transformed
according to the method of Dohmen et al. (1991) . SUSY7 transformed with
YEP 112A1XE was used for control experiments.
Uptake of Radiolabeled Sugars
Yeast cells were grown to the early logarithmic phase, washed with
distilled water, and resuspended to 1% (w/v) in yeast nitrogen base
(YNB) medium containing 25 mM
2-(N-morpholino)-ethanesulfonic acid (MES) buffer, pH 4.5. The pH
dependence of Suc uptake was determined in YNB medium buffered at
different pH values with 25 mM MES. A 100-µL aliquot of
the cell suspension was incubated at 28°C for 0, 60, 120, 180, and
300 s in 100 µL of a solution containing
[3H]Suc (final specific acitivity: 14.8 MBq
mmol 1). The reaction was stopped by addition of
8 mL of ice-cold water and filtration on glass-fiber filters
(13400-25-S, Sartorius, Palaiseau, France). The radioactivity
incorporated in the cells was determined in a liquid scintillation
counter (Packard Instruments, Meriden, CT). For inhibition and
competition studies, reagents were added 30 s prior to Suc.
RNA Isolation and Northern-Blot Analyses
For each organ studied, samples from four independent plants
treated under the same conditions were harvested after 4 h of photosynthesis, pooled, and frozen in liquid nitrogen. Total RNA was
isolated as described by Kay et al. (1987). Twenty micrograms of total
RNA was separated on 1.2% (w/v) agarose gels containing formaldehyde and transferred to nylon filters as described in Sambrook
et al. (1989) . Hybridization was at 65°C and the
EcoRI/XhoI fragment of AgSUT1 was used as a
probe. The final wash was 0.1% (w/v) SDS, 0.5× SSC at 68°C
for 15 min. Radioactivity in the reacting bands was counted with an
Instant Imager (Packard Instruments), and the background counts of the
membrane were subtracted. The amount of RNA loaded in each lane was
calibrated by hybridization with a 25S riboprobe and Instant Imager
counting (Packard Instruments) as described above. The values obtained
with the riboprobe were used to calculate the relative intensity of the
signals for AgSUT1 in each lane.
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RESULTS |
Isolation of Celery Suc Transporters
Screening of the celery leaf cDNA library with the radiolabeled
DNA of the spinach Suc transporter SoSUT1 (Riesmeier et al., 1992 ) resulted in eight positive clones ( 1-8). In vivo excision was
performed with these clones, which were then partially sequenced. One
of these clones did not show any similarity to the Suc transporters. The remaining seven clones were homologous to the SoSUT1
sequence. However, some of the clones differed in the length of their
5' and 3' non-coding regions. This phenomenon was already observed when
the Man-6-P reductase of celery was cloned in the same library (Everard
et al., 1997 ). Three different cDNAs were therefore identified: two
(AgSUT2A, accession no. AF167415, and AgSUT2B,
accession no. AF167416) had identical coding regions, whereas the third one (AgSUT1, accession no. AF063400) also showed slight
differences in the coding region (nine different amino acids residues
compared with AgSUT2A/B). Two 5' noncoding sequences were identified:
one starts 109 bp in front of the ATG, the other was 43 nucleotides shorter in the more distal 5' region (Fig.
1A). All 3'-untranslated ends had a
polyadenylation signal (AATAAA) upstream of the
poly(A+) tail. These regions were different
downstream of this motif (Fig. 1B). In addition, the 5' and 3'
noncoding sequences share between 73% and 80% identical nucleotides
with those of DcSUT2 (Daucus carota SUT2; Shakya
and Sturm, 1998 ) cDNA.

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Figure 1.
Comparison of 5' (A) and 3' (B) untranslated
regions of AgSUT1, AgSUT2A,
AgSUT2B, and DcSUT2 (Shakya and Sturm,
1998 ).
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The sequence of the longest cDNA clone 1, AgSUT1, is
shown in Figure 2. The longest open
reading frame for AgSUT1 is 1536 bp long, encoding a protein
of 512 amino acid residues, a calculated molecular mass of 54.5 kD, and a pI of 9.27. The AgSUT1 protein sequence shows 12 hydrophobic
regions (underlined in Fig. 2; Kyte and Doolittle, 1982 ; see Lemoine,
2000 for a detailed predictive model) representing potential
transmembrane helices. As shown in Table
I, the AgSUT1 protein shares between 63%
and 70% identical amino acids with the Suc transporters from spinach
(Riesmeier et al., 1992 ), from Arabidopsis (Sauer and Stolz, 1994 ) and
from Plantago major (Gahrtz et al., 1994 ). However, a very
high identity (92%) was found with DcSUT2, the Suc transporter from
carrot, another member of the Apiaceae family. Interestingly, AgSUT1
was identified from a leaf cDNA library, whereas DcSUT2 was found in a
root cDNA library (see below for a longer discussion of this point).
Two Asn residues that are part of a consensus sequence for
N-glycosylation (Asn-3 and Asn-134) are located on the
cytoplasmic side and should therefore not be glycosylated. Potential
phosphorylation sites are located at residues T136, T175, S252, and
S263.

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Figure 2.
Complete cDNA of AgSUT1. The
translated protein sequence is also indicated. Predicted transmembrane
regions (TmPred program) are underlined.
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Characterization of AgSUT1 in S. cerevisiae
To demonstrate that the identified cDNAs code for Suc carriers,
they were heterologously expressed in yeast. AgSUT1,
AgSUT2A, and AgSUT2B cDNAs were ligated into the
EcoRI-XhoI sites of the S. cerevisiae
expression plasmid YEP 112A1XE. Competent YSH SUSY7 cells (Riesmeier et
al., 1992 ) were transformed with those plasmids and YEP 112A1XE was
used as a control.
Figure 3 shows that yeast cells
expressing AgSUT1 transported 3H-Suc at a much
higher rate (4.1 nmol Suc mg 1 protein
min 1) than control cells (0.2 nmol Suc
mg 1 protein min 1).
Although not presented, similar results were obtained with AgSUT2A and
AgSUT2B. Due to the very high level of sequence identity, only AgSUT1
was used for the rest of the characterization of Suc uptake.

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Figure 3.
Uptake of Suc into transgenic S.
cerevisiae cells. The Suc concentration was 250 µM and the external pH 4.5. , Uptake into cells
transformed with AgSUT1 cDNA; , Suc uptake
into control cells transformed with the plasmid YEP. The
results are the means ± SD of three independent
experiments (three replicates per experiment).
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The pH dependence of Suc transport by AgSUT1 was determined in the pH
range of 4.5 to 7.5 (Fig. 4). AgSUT1 is
much more active at pH 4.5, and the relative activity decreased to 10%
when the pH was increased to 5.5 (Fig. 4). Therefore, as far as pH
dependence is concerned, AgSUT1 is more closely related to, e.g. SoSUT1
or AtSUC2 than AtSUC1, which displays a broader optimal pH range. These
data are in agreement with a Suc/proton cotransport mechanism.

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Figure 4.
pH dependence of Suc transport in transgenic yeast
cells expressing AgSUT1. Measurements were performed at 250 µM Suc in YNB medium containing 25 mM MES
buffered at the indicated pH. Incubation time was 2 min. The results
are the means ± SD of three independent experiments
(three replicates per experiment).
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When the uptake of Suc by AgSUT1 in yeast cells was studied for 1 min
at concentrations ranging from 25 to 750 µM, a clear saturation was visible (data not shown). The Lineweaver-Burk plot of
the data (Fig. 5) gave an apparent
affinity (Km) of 139 µM and a maximum velocity
(Vmax) of 5.9 nmol
mg 1 protein min 1. The
Km value of AgSUT1 for Suc is in the
same range as the Km value determined
for this carrier in plasma membrane vesicles from phloem strands
(Km = 280 µM;
Vmax = 3 nmol
mg 1 protein 30 s 1;
Salmon et al., 1995 ).

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Figure 5.
Lineweaver-Burk plot of Suc uptake as a function
of concentration in transgenic yeast cells expressing AgSUT1. The
results are the means ± SD of three independent
experiments (three replicates per experiment).
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A protonophore such as carbonyl cyanide
m-chlorophenylhydrazone strongly inhibits Suc transport
catalyzed by AgSUT1 protein (Table II).
These data confirm the assumption that Suc uptake is mediated
by a proton cotransport mechanism. Suc transport by AgSUT1 is also
sensitive to thiol reagents such as N-ethylmaleimide and
p-chloro-mercuriphenylsulfonic acid or to
diethylpyrocarbonate (an imidazole group reagent). The histidyl residue
involved in diethylpyrocarbonate sensitivity identified in AtSUC2 (Lu
and Bush, 1998 ) is also conserved in AgSUT1 at position 66. Thiol groups and imidazole groups may therefore be implicated in substrate recognition or in the uptake reaction itself.
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Table II.
Sensitivity of the AgSUT1 activity to inhibitors
Potential inhibitors were added 30 s prior to labeled Suc. All
transport tests were performed at 250 µM Suc at pH 4.5. The results are the means ± SD of three independent
experiments (three replicates per experiment).
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To determine the substrate specificity of AgSUT1, transport of Suc was
studied in the presence of various sugars and derivatives that might be
potential substrates for a Suc transporter (Table III). Mannitol had no influence on the
transport rates, which supports the assumption that Suc and mannitol
uptakes are mediated by two independent transport systems in celery
(Daie, 1986 ; Salmon et al., 1995 ). -Phenylglucoside strongly
inhibits Suc uptake, which agrees with published data on other Suc
carrier specificity (AtSUC1/2, SoSUT1, and StSUT1). On the other hand,
the inhibition by maltose is weak, in the same range as for StSUT1
(Riesmeier et al., 1993 ) and RcSCR1 (Weig and Komor, 1996 ). All other
Suc carriers expressed in yeast are inhibited by maltose (see Lemoine,
2000 ). The addition of raffinose led to a higher inhibition than that
noted for other Suc carriers expressed in yeast. This could be
related to the fact that small amounts of raffinose are detected among
the soluble sugars present in celery (N. Noiraud, L. Maurousset,
S. Delrot, and R. Lemoine, unpublished data).
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Table III.
Specificity of the AgSUT1 Suc carrier
Sugars were added 30 s prior to labeled Suc. All transport tests
were performed at 250 µM Suc, pH 4.5, and incubation time
was 3 min. The results are the means ± SD of three
independent experiments (three replicates per experiment).
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Expression of AgSUT1 in Different Organs and Tissues
The results presented in Figure 6
have been obtained with AgSUT1 as a probe, and the
quantity of RNA loaded per lane was calibrated with a riboprobe. The
results are expressed as a percentage of expression in mature leaf,
where AgSUT1 was found to be maximal. This is therefore in
agreement with AgSUT1 being the ortholog to SUT1 in other species.
AgSUT1 expression was also detected in young leaves, but
only at low level in roots. As originally described by Daie (1986) ,
phloem strands are easy to isolate from celery fleshy petioles. Those
phloem strands are composed of sieve elements, companion cells, and
phloem parenchyma cells, and can be used for plasma membrane isolation
(Salmon et al., 1995 ) and RNA extraction. As can be seen in Figure 6,
AgSUT1 expression was also high in phloem from both mature
and young petioles, which corresponds to the same developmental stage
as mature and young leaves. On the contrary, AgSUT1
expression in the storage parenchyma or total petiole was very weak.

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Figure 6.
Expression of AgSUT1 in the
different organs and tissues of celery. Organs from four different
plants were pooled before RNA extraction. A, Film of the northern-blot
analysis with AgSUT1 as a probe (20 µg RNA per lane).
B, Scan of the image obtained after radioactivity counting with an
Instant Imager (Packard Instruments). C, Same as B except that a 25S
riboprobe from Arabidopsis was used to calibrate the amount of RNA
loaded per lane. D, Quantification of AgSUT1 expression
as percent of mature leaves (100%). Results derived from radioactivity
counts obtained in B and C.
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Expression of AgSUT1 during Salt Stress
The expression of the Suc carrier was investigated under salt
stress conditions. Plants were watered during 4 weeks with 300 mM NaCl as described by Everard et al. (1994) . Under these
conditions, growth of young leaves still occurred, but the senescence
of older leaves was accelerated and roots were shorter and larger
(Everard et al., 1994 ; N. Noiraud, S. Delrot, and R. Lemoine,
unpublished data). Half of the stressed plants were watered with tap
water for 1 extra week (rehydrated plants).
The results presented in Figure 7 show
that under salt stress conditions, the expression of Suc carriers was
lowered in all organs but to a different extent. In source leaves the
expression was reduced by 30%. A strong reduction (50%) of
AgSUT1 expression was observed in young leaves. In
phloem tissues isolated from either young or mature petioles,
AgSUT1 was only slightly reduced to 80% of control in both
cases. The most striking alteration was noted in the roots: the
expression was dramatically reduced in the case of salt stress,
representing only 10% of expression in control roots. If
AgSUT1 expression pattern in the different organs of control
plants is taken into consideration (Fig. 6), the residual expression in
young leaves and roots was very low following a 1-month salt stress. In
all organs studied, a 1-week rehydration period was not sufficient to
restore AgSUT1 expression to control levels (without salt
stress). Work by Pardossi et al. (1998) indicated that a significant
reduction in the salt content of stressed celery plants was only
observed after a 4-month rehydration period. Therefore, the 1-week
rehydration period used here was certainly not sufficient for a
significant reduction in the salt content.

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Figure 7.
Effect of salt stress on AgSUT1
expression in different organs of celery. Hatched bars, Control plants;
horizontally striped bars, plants stressed for 4 weeks with 300 mM NaCl; vertically striped bars, plants rehydrated for 1 week after the salt stress. The results were obtained as described in
Figure 6 (counting of radioactivity with an Instant Imager and
calibration with a riboprobe), and the expression in control organs
taken as 100%. Stars indicate non-determined conditions.
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DISCUSSION |
Suc Transporters in Celery
Three different cDNAs encoding Suc transporters were identified by
hybridization screening. Two of these (AgSUT2A and
AgSUT2B) have identical coding sequences and differ only in
their 5' and 3' non-coding regions. AgSUT1 and
AgSUT2A/AgSUT2B are closely sequence related, because they
only differ by nine amino acids. Moreover, all the coding sequences
have the same length and are all able to transport Suc when expressed
in yeast. This situation is reminiscent of that in carrot, in which two
cDNAs encoding Suc carriers also differ only in these regions
(DcSUT1A and DcSUT1B; Shakya and Sturm, 1998 ).
However, in that case, the third cDNA identified (DcSUT2)
was not closely related to the other two. As expected from species of
the same family, a high conservation level was found between AgSUTs
and DcSUT2 (more than 90% identity at the amino acid level, and 80%
at the nucleotide level). Surprisingly, the conservation extends to 5'
and 3' untranslated regions with identity levels around 80%. Similar
homologies were observed with other 5' and 3' flanking regions of cDNAs
such as the AgCam (A. graveolens calmodulin,
accession no. AF064552) and the DcCam-1 (D. carota calmodulin, accession no. X59751) (data not shown). This
indicates that gene sequences are highly conserved between those two
members of the Apiaceae family.
According to its kinetic characteristics (pH dependence, sensitivity to
protonophores), AgSUT1 works as an H+/Suc
transporter functionally related to the other SUT1 transporters identified so far. The Km value for
AgSUT1 (139 µM) represents the highest affinity
determined so far for Suc transporters expressed in yeast (Riesmeier et
al., 1992 , 1993 ; Gahrtz et al., 1994 ; Sauer and Stolz, 1994 ). However,
due to different protocols and/or yeast strains used for uptake
experiments, the differences in affinity may not be significant.
Mannitol had no influence on the activity of AgSUT1, confirming the
existence of independent transport systems for both substrates (Daie,
1986 ; Salmon et al., 1995 ).
Localization of AgSUT1 Expression
AgSUT1 was used as a probe for northern analysis.
However, due to the very high level of sequence identity with
AgSUT2A/AgSUT2B, cross-hybridization is more than probable
and it was not possible to discriminate the expression of either of
these carriers. For the rest of the discussion, we will refer to AgSUT
to indicate that the signals observed in northern experiments were
either due to AgSUT1 or AgSUT2. All of the
transport interpretations are based on results obtained at the mRNA
level and, therefore, post-transcriptional regulation has not been
considered here. Some recent data indicate that phosphorylation could
regulate the Suc carrier activity (Roblin et al., 1998 ), but
transcriptional regulation is also important. This was demonstrated by
the rapid turnover of the Suc carrier mRNA and protein measured in
potato leaves (Kühn et al., 1997 ), and by the parallel decrease
of Suc transporter mRNA levels and Suc transport activity in transgenic potato leaves (Lemoine et al., 1996 ) and sugar beet leaves (Chiou and
Bush, 1998 ). Moreover, results showing higher AgSUT expression in
phloem than in storage parenchyma in mature petioles (Fig. 6) are in
perfect agreement with the higher Suc transport activity reported in
plasma membrane vesicles from phloem than from storage parenchyma
(Salmon et al., 1995 ).
AgSUT expression is higher in source leaves than in any
other organ, and higher in phloem than in surrounding tissues in mature petioles, in agreement with results obtained with SUT1 carriers in
other species. In spite of the direct access to phloem in petioles of
celery, AgSUT expression is higher in leaves (all tissues of the leaves) than in phloem strands, which are highly enriched in
conducting cells. This indicates that the minor veins network of mature
leaves is the site where expression of Suc carriers is the highest.
Expression of AgSUT in mature petioles of celery may
indicate a different role for the Suc transporter as, for example, in potato stem. In potato, it was proposed that the Suc carrier retrieves Suc leaking from the phloem (Riesmeier et al., 1993 ). Daie (1986) suggested that in mature petiole of celery, loading of Suc and mannitol
mimics phloem loading in leaf minor veins, because sugars stored in the
fleshy parenchyma of petioles are reloaded in the phloem to feed sink
organs (new leaves and reproductive organs at the time of flowering).
High expression of AgSUT in the phloem and very low
expression in the storage parenchyma (Fig. 6) are in agreement with the
model proposed by Daie. AgSUT expression in phloem from
mature petioles confirms results from Salmon et al. (1995) on Suc
uptake in plasma membrane vesicles indicating that, although hexoses
are stored in storage parenchyma (Keller and Matile, 1989 ), Suc is
reloaded into the phloem. Attempts to isolate a hexose carrier by
reverse transcriptase-PCR from phloem RNA were not successful (data not
shown), confirming the absence of hexose uptake in phloem.
During their development, petioles undergo a sink to source transition
similar to the one existing in leaves. Recent results favor symplasmic
unloading in young sink organs (Schmaltig and Geiger, 1985 ; Roberts et
al., 1997 ; Imlau et al., 1999 ). However, data from northern analysis
(Fig. 6) clearly indicate that AgSUT expression was detected
in young leaves and in the phloem of young petioles. At the present
time no information is available on the unloading pathway of Suc in
sink petioles. One cannot rule out the possibility that young leaves
and petioles used for RNA extraction (one-fifth of their final length)
were already engaged in the sink to source transition. In fact several
studies conducted in celery indicate that Suc synthesizing activities
are detected quite early in sink leaves (Davis and Loescher, 1990 ) and
that Suc export starts at a very early stage. This could explain why AgSUT was detected in young leaves. Similar levels of
AgSUT expression were found in phloem from source and sink
petioles. Depending on the stage of development, AgSUT could be
involved either in Suc unloading from the phloem (sink situation) or
Suc loading into the phloem (source situation). Obviously, more
experiments are needed to precisely describe the function of the
carriers during petiole and leaf development. Expression in root would also indicate that unloading occurs through AgSUT as
suggested by several studies (Riesmeier et al., 1993 ; Truernit and
Sauer, 1995 ).
Despite high sequence homologies between AgSUT and
DcSUT2, their expression pattern is quite different.
DcSUT2 was identified from a root cDNA library and detected
in reproductive organs, and has therefore been classified as a
sink-specific Suc transporter. However, some level of expression was
also detected in source leaves. Nevertheless, AgSUT is more closely
sequence-related to DcSUT2 than to DcSUT1. Therefore, there is no
relationship between sequence and site of expression. We performed
reverse transcriptase-PCR on RNA extracted from celery roots, but the
partial cDNA obtained matched perfectly AgSUT1 (data not shown). More
conclusive information will be obtained only after promoter analysis of
the different genes.
Changes in AgSUT1 Expression in Response to Salt Stress
There are many situations where plants have to adapt their carbon
allocation to sink organs and define new priorities among sinks. It is
well known that under limiting nutrient supply, plants can flower and
set seeds much faster than under normal conditions. Salt stress can be
regarded as a situation in which plants have to cope both with
decreased water availability and ion toxicity (Levitt, 1980 ). Carbon
metabolism under stress has been investigated mainly in plants able to
synthesize compatible solutes such as Pro, Gly betaine, and, as in
celery, polyols. Polyols are unique because, like Suc, they are primary
photosynthetic products and are thus different from nitrogen compounds.
However, in many cases the source-to-sink transport of these compounds
has not been taken into consideration. In celery, mannitol and Suc are
synthesized in source leaves and then transported to sink organs. A
shift in photosynthetic carbon allocation from Suc towards mannitol has
been reported (4-fold increase in the mannitol/Suc ratio compared with
controls; Everard et al., 1994 ) in the same stress conditions as the
ones used in this study.
To maintain a high level of mannitol (an osmoprotectant), mannitol
dehydrogenase is repressed, and it has been suggested that Suc is then
metabolized to meet the need for energy of stressed tissues (Everard et
al., 1994 ), just as in flowering plants and sink tissues (Fellman and
Loescher, 1987 ). A high level of Suc (hexose) was shown to repress
mannitol dehydrogenase expression in celery cells (Prata et al.,
1997 ). This would indicate that Suc transport has to be maintained,
which is in agreement with the rather low reduction of AgSUT expression
reported here in source-exporting organs (leaves and petioles). The
general down-regulation of AgSUT expression could be the result of a
decreased demand for energy as growth is reduced. A more dramatic
reduction of AgSUT expression is observed in roots.
Expression of Suc carriers in roots has been related to Suc unloading
(Riesmeier et al., 1993 ; Truernit and Sauer, 1995 ). If this is true,
this would indicate that, in the case of salt stress, Suc unloading in
roots is extremely reduced. As roots are the primary site of contact
with the salt solution, mannitol accumulation may be of major
importance in increasing the osmotic potential and allowing water
uptake. Root growth is dramatically reduced in the case of salt stress
(Everard et al., 1994 ; our own observations). Therefore, the reduced
expression of AgSUT in roots could be the result of a
decreased metabolic demand. Residual expression of AgSUT
might be sufficient to account for the reduced flux of Suc to the
roots. However, the possibility of salt-induced expression of a
root-specific Suc carrier not related to AgSUT1 or AgSUT2 cannot be
ruled out at the present time.
The salt stress results presented here certainly represent a new steady
state in celery plants adapted to growth on high-salt conditions. Other
studies on sugar carrier regulation have been conducted on much shorter
periods of time (Weber et al., 1997 ; Chiou and Bush, 1998 ), because
they were run on detached organs. The only transporter that has been
studied in planta under salt stress conditions is the Pro transporter
ProT2 from Arabidopsis (Rentsch et al., 1996 ), the expression of which
is highly increased in response to 200 mM NaCl. In that
case, an increase in ProT2 expression was already detected after 4 h. Interestingly, this increase in ProT2 expression is paralleled by a
decrease in a general amino acid permease. In celery, this could mean
that mannitol transporter expression is increased during salt stress.
Growing plants on high soil salinity represents a challenge for the
future and it is therefore important to understand the strategies used
by plants to cope with such stress. Up to now, most of the research
devoted to polyols concerned their metabolism, both at the fundamental
level and in transgenic plants engineered for salt resistance. However,
transport events of osmolytes may be of significant importance because
they are synthesized only in leaves. Plants such as celery may
represent an excellent model for the study of polyol and sugar
transport in response to stress because of a variety of responses
(Stoop and Pharr, 1994 ; Pardossi et al., 1998 ). This work demonstrates
down-regulation of a Suc transporter expression in roots in
response to an abiotic stress highly relevant to culture conditions.
Although mannitol biosynthesis has been considered as a response to
salt stress, our results indicate that Suc transport is certainly not
suppressed under such conditions. Further work is now under way to
relate the changes in Suc metabolism and, more precisely, to describe
the transporters involved by identifying their respective promoters.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
The authors wish to thank Prof. W. Loescher and Dr. J.D. Everard
(Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI) for the generous gift of
the excellent celery leaf cDNA library.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received August 17, 1999; accepted January 6, 2000.
1
This work was supported by the French Ministry
for Research and Higher Education, the Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique, and the Region Poitou-Charentes.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail remi.lemoine{at}campus.univ-poitiers.fr;
fax 33-5-49-45-41-86.
 |
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