Login / Signup

Inverse regulation of SOS1 and HKT1 protein localization and stability by SOS3/CBL4 in Arabidopsis thaliana .

Francisco M Gámez-ArjonaHee Jin ParkElena GarcíaRashid AmanIrene VillaltaNatalia RaddatzRaul CarrancoAkhtar AliZahir AliShah ZareenAnna De LucaEduardo Oscar LeidiMiguel Daniel-MozoZheng-Yi XuArmando AlbertWoe Yeon KimJose M PardoClara Sanchez-RodriguezDae-Jin YunFrancisco J Quintero
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
To control net sodium (Na + ) uptake, Arabidopsis plants utilize the plasma membrane (PM) Na + /H + antiporter SOS1 to achieve Na + efflux at the root and Na + loading into the xylem, and the channel-like HKT1;1 protein that mediates the reverse flux of Na + unloading off the xylem. Together, these opposing transport systems govern the partition of Na + within the plant yet they must be finely co-regulated to prevent a futile cycle of xylem loading and unloading. Here, we show that the Arabidopsis SOS3 protein acts as the molecular switch governing these Na + fluxes by favoring the recruitment of SOS1 to the PM and its subsequent activation by the SOS2/SOS3 kinase complex under salt stress, while commanding HKT1;1 protein degradation upon acute sodic stress. SOS3 achieves this role by direct and SOS2-independent binding to previously unrecognized functional domains of SOS1 and HKT1;1. These results indicate that roots first retain moderate amounts of salts to facilitate osmoregulation, yet when sodicity exceeds a set point, SOS3-dependent HKT1;1 degradation switches the balance toward Na + export out of the root. Thus, SOS3 functionally links and co-regulates the two major Na + transport systems operating in vascular plants controlling plant tolerance to salinity.
Keyphrases
  • air pollution
  • protein protein
  • amino acid
  • risk assessment
  • liver failure
  • heavy metals
  • hepatitis b virus
  • single molecule
  • respiratory failure