SlNRT1.5 transporter and the SlSKOR K+ channel jointly contribute to K+ translocation in tomato plants
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Elsevier
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Abstract
Accumulation of K+ in shoots is largely dependent on K+ transport via the xylem and has important implications
not only for K+ nutrition but also for stress tolerance. In tomato plants, the K+ channel SlSKOR contributed to K+
translocation but the decrease in the shoot K+ content in slskor mutants was only ~15 %, indicating that
additional K+ transport systems operated in the tomato stele. Here, we studied the physiological roles of the
transporter SlNRT1.5 in tomato plants, whose homolog in Arabidopsis, AtNRT1.5, contributed to xylem K+ load.
By using heterologous expression of SlNRT1.5 in Xenopus oocytes and a slnrt1.5 knock-out mutant, we have
gained insights into its role in shoot K+ nutrition. Expression of SlNRT1.5 in Xenopus oocytes resulted in K+
efflux, similar to that mediated by AtNRT1.5, which could indicate that SlNRT1.5 operates as a K+ transport
system. Plants lacking slnrt1.5 accumulated less K+ in shoots than WT plants under low external pH (4.5), and
low supply of K+ (0.05 mM) and N (0.5 mM). Interestingly, slnrt1.5 plants accumulated less Na+ and Cl- in shoots
than WT plants. Further analyses on slskor slnrt1.5 double mutant plants revealed an overlapping role of SlSKOR
and SlNRT1.5 in shoot K+ accumulation. Double mutants showed a 40 % decrease in shoot K+ content in
comparison with slskor and slnrt1.5 single mutants. Altogether, this study showed that SlNRT1.5 and SlSKOR are
major players in shoot K+ accumulation in tomato plants.
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Martínez-Martínez et al., 2024. SlNRT1.5 transporter and the SlSKOR K+ channel jointly contribute to K+ translocation in tomato plants. Plant Stress 14. 100689












