4.7 Article

High-affinity K+ uptake in pepper plants

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 56, Issue 416, Pages 1553-1562

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/eri150

Keywords

ammonium; pepper; potassium; transport

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High-affinity K+ uptake is an essential process for plant nutrition under K+-limiting conditions. The results presented here demonstrate that pepper (Capsicum annuum) plants grown in the absence of NH4+ and starved of K+ show an NH4+-sensitive high-affinity K+ uptake that allows plant roots to deplete external K+ to values below 1 mu M. When plants are grown in the presence of NH4+, high-affinity K+ uptake is not inhibited by NH4+. Although NH4+-grown plants deplete external K+ below 1 mu M in the absence of NH4+, when 1 mM NH4+ is present they do not deplete external K+ below 10 mu M. A K+ transporter of the HAK family, CaHAK1, is very likely mediating the NH4+-sensitive component of the high-affinity K+ uptake in pepper roots. CaHAK1 is strongly induced in the roots that show the NH4+-sensitive high-affinity K+ uptake and its induction is reduced in K+-starved plants grown in the presence of NH4+. The NH4+-insensitive K+ uptake may be mediated by an AKT1-like K+ channel.

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