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NO3- , PO43- and SO42- deprivation reduced LKT1-mediated low-affinity K+ uptake and SKOR-mediated K+ translocation in tomato and Arabidopsis plants.

Reyes RódenasManuel Francisco García-LegazElvira López-GómezVicente MartínezFrancisco RubioM Ángeles Botella
Published in: Physiologia plantarum (2017)
Regulation of essential macronutrients acquisition by plants in response to their availability is a key process for plant adaptation to changing environments. Here we show in tomato and Arabidopsis plants that when they are subjected to NO3- , PO43- and SO42- deprivation, low-affinity K+ uptake and K+ translocation to the shoot are reduced. In parallel, these nutritional deficiencies produce reductions in the messenger levels of the genes encoding the main systems for low-affinity K+ uptake and K+ translocation, i.e. AKT1 and SKOR in Arabidopsis and LKT1 and the tomato homolog of SKOR, SlSKOR in tomato, respectively. The results suggest that the shortage of one nutrient produces a general downregulation of the acquisition of other nutrients. In the case of K+ nutrient, one of the mechanisms for such a response resides in the transcriptional repression of the genes encoding the systems for K+ uptake and translocation.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • signaling pathway
  • cell proliferation
  • cell wall
  • genome wide identification
  • genome wide
  • gene expression
  • plant growth
  • bioinformatics analysis
  • mass spectrometry
  • heat shock