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HKT1;5 Transporter Gene Expression and Association of Amino Acid Substitutions With Salt Tolerance Across Rice Genotypes

Plants need to maintain a low Na(+)/K(+) ratio for their survival and growth when there is high sodium concentration in soil. Under these circumstances, the high affinity K(+) transporter (HKT) and its homologs are known to perform a critical role with HKT1;5 as a major player in maintaining Na(+) c...

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Autores principales: Shohan, Mohammad Umer Sharif, Sinha, Souvik, Nabila, Fahmida Habib, Dastidar, Shubhra Ghosh, Seraj, Zeba I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6843544/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31749823
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2019.01420
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author Shohan, Mohammad Umer Sharif
Sinha, Souvik
Nabila, Fahmida Habib
Dastidar, Shubhra Ghosh
Seraj, Zeba I.
author_facet Shohan, Mohammad Umer Sharif
Sinha, Souvik
Nabila, Fahmida Habib
Dastidar, Shubhra Ghosh
Seraj, Zeba I.
author_sort Shohan, Mohammad Umer Sharif
collection PubMed
description Plants need to maintain a low Na(+)/K(+) ratio for their survival and growth when there is high sodium concentration in soil. Under these circumstances, the high affinity K(+) transporter (HKT) and its homologs are known to perform a critical role with HKT1;5 as a major player in maintaining Na(+) concentration. Preferential expression of HKT1;5 in roots compared to shoots was observed in rice and rice-like genotypes from real time PCR, microarray, and RNAseq experiments and data. Its expression trend was generally higher under increasing salt stress in sensitive IR29, tolerant Pokkali, both glycophytes; as well as the distant wild rice halophyte, Porteresia coarctata, indicative of its importance during salt stress. These results were supported by a low Na(+)/K(+) ratio in Pokkali, but a much lower one in P. coarctata. HKT1;5 has functional variability among salt sensitive and tolerant varieties and multiple sequence alignment of sequences of HKT1;5 from Oryza species and P. coarctata showed 4 major amino acid substitutions (140 P/A/T/I, 184 H/R, D332H, V395L), with similarity amongst the tolerant genotypes and the halophyte but in variance with sensitive ones. The best predicted 3D structure of HKT1;5 was generated using Ktrab potassium transporter as template. Among the four substitutions, conserved presence of aspartate (332) and valine (395) in opposite faces of the membrane along the Na(+)/K(+) channel was observed only for the tolerant and halophytic genotypes. A model based on above, as well as molecular dynamics simulation study showed that valine is unable to generate strong hydrophobic network with its surroundings in comparison to leucine due to reduced side chain length. The resultant alteration in pore rigidity increases the likelihood of Na(+) transport from xylem sap to parenchyma and further to soil. The model also proposes that the presence of aspartate at the 332 position possibly leads to frequent polar interactions with the extracellular loop polar residues which may shift the loop away from the opening of the constriction at the pore and therefore permit easy efflux of the Na(+). These two substitutions of the HKT1;5 transporter probably help tolerant varieties maintain better Na(+)/K(+) ratio for survival under salt stress.
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spelling pubmed-68435442019-11-20 HKT1;5 Transporter Gene Expression and Association of Amino Acid Substitutions With Salt Tolerance Across Rice Genotypes Shohan, Mohammad Umer Sharif Sinha, Souvik Nabila, Fahmida Habib Dastidar, Shubhra Ghosh Seraj, Zeba I. Front Plant Sci Plant Science Plants need to maintain a low Na(+)/K(+) ratio for their survival and growth when there is high sodium concentration in soil. Under these circumstances, the high affinity K(+) transporter (HKT) and its homologs are known to perform a critical role with HKT1;5 as a major player in maintaining Na(+) concentration. Preferential expression of HKT1;5 in roots compared to shoots was observed in rice and rice-like genotypes from real time PCR, microarray, and RNAseq experiments and data. Its expression trend was generally higher under increasing salt stress in sensitive IR29, tolerant Pokkali, both glycophytes; as well as the distant wild rice halophyte, Porteresia coarctata, indicative of its importance during salt stress. These results were supported by a low Na(+)/K(+) ratio in Pokkali, but a much lower one in P. coarctata. HKT1;5 has functional variability among salt sensitive and tolerant varieties and multiple sequence alignment of sequences of HKT1;5 from Oryza species and P. coarctata showed 4 major amino acid substitutions (140 P/A/T/I, 184 H/R, D332H, V395L), with similarity amongst the tolerant genotypes and the halophyte but in variance with sensitive ones. The best predicted 3D structure of HKT1;5 was generated using Ktrab potassium transporter as template. Among the four substitutions, conserved presence of aspartate (332) and valine (395) in opposite faces of the membrane along the Na(+)/K(+) channel was observed only for the tolerant and halophytic genotypes. A model based on above, as well as molecular dynamics simulation study showed that valine is unable to generate strong hydrophobic network with its surroundings in comparison to leucine due to reduced side chain length. The resultant alteration in pore rigidity increases the likelihood of Na(+) transport from xylem sap to parenchyma and further to soil. The model also proposes that the presence of aspartate at the 332 position possibly leads to frequent polar interactions with the extracellular loop polar residues which may shift the loop away from the opening of the constriction at the pore and therefore permit easy efflux of the Na(+). These two substitutions of the HKT1;5 transporter probably help tolerant varieties maintain better Na(+)/K(+) ratio for survival under salt stress. Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-11-04 /pmc/articles/PMC6843544/ /pubmed/31749823 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2019.01420 Text en Copyright © 2019 Shohan, Sinha, Nabila, Dastidar and Seraj http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Plant Science
Shohan, Mohammad Umer Sharif
Sinha, Souvik
Nabila, Fahmida Habib
Dastidar, Shubhra Ghosh
Seraj, Zeba I.
HKT1;5 Transporter Gene Expression and Association of Amino Acid Substitutions With Salt Tolerance Across Rice Genotypes
title HKT1;5 Transporter Gene Expression and Association of Amino Acid Substitutions With Salt Tolerance Across Rice Genotypes
title_full HKT1;5 Transporter Gene Expression and Association of Amino Acid Substitutions With Salt Tolerance Across Rice Genotypes
title_fullStr HKT1;5 Transporter Gene Expression and Association of Amino Acid Substitutions With Salt Tolerance Across Rice Genotypes
title_full_unstemmed HKT1;5 Transporter Gene Expression and Association of Amino Acid Substitutions With Salt Tolerance Across Rice Genotypes
title_short HKT1;5 Transporter Gene Expression and Association of Amino Acid Substitutions With Salt Tolerance Across Rice Genotypes
title_sort hkt1;5 transporter gene expression and association of amino acid substitutions with salt tolerance across rice genotypes
topic Plant Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6843544/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31749823
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2019.01420
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