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Nitrogen form-mediated ethylene signal regulates root-to-shoot K+ translocation via NRT1.5.

Fangsen XuQuan ZhangXueru WangJianhua ZhangAbdelbagi M IsmailZhen-Hua Zhang
Published in: Plant, cell & environment (2021)
Nitrogen-potassium synergistic and antagonistic interactions are the typical case of nutrient interactions. However, the underlying mechanism for the integration of the external N form into K+ homeostasis remains unclear. Here, we show that opposite effects of NO3 - and NH4 + on root-shoot K+ translocation were due to differential regulation of an ethylene signalling pathway targeting the NRT1.5 transporter. NH4 + upregulated the transcriptional activity of EIN3, but repressed the expression of NRT1.5. However, the addition of NO3 - strongly suppressed the activity of EIN3, whereas its addition upregulated the expression of AtNRT1.5 and shoot K+ concentration. The 35S:EIN3/ein3eil1 plants, nrt1.5 mutants and nrt1.5/skor double mutants displayed a low K+ chlorosis phenotype, especially under NH4 + conditions with low K+ supply. Ion content analyses indicate that root-to-shoot K+ translocation was significantly reduced in these mutants. A Y1H assay, an EMSA and a transient expression assay confirmed that AtEIN3 protein could directly bind to the promoter of NRT1.5 to repress its expression. Furthermore, grafted plants with the roots of 35S:EIN3 and ein3eil1/nrt1.5 mutants displayed marked leaf chlorosis with a low K+ concentration. Collectively, our findings reveal that the interaction between N form and K+ was achieved by modulating root-derived ethylene signals to regulate root-to-shoot K+ translocation via NRT1.5.
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