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Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Proton and anion transport across the tonoplast vesicles in bromeliad species

Paula Natália Pereira A , James Andrew Charles Smith B , Eduardo Purgatto C and Helenice Mercier A D
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Department of Botany, Institute of Biosciences, Universidade de São Paulo, CEP 05508-090, São Paulo, SP, Brazil.

B Department of Plant Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX1 3RB, UK.

C Department of Food and Experimental Nutrition, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Universidade de São Paulo,CEP 05422-970 São Paulo, SP, Brazil.

D Corresponding author. Email: hmercier@usp.br

Functional Plant Biology 44(6) 646-653 https://doi.org/10.1071/FP16293
Submitted: 15 August 2016  Accepted: 10 March 2017   Published: 13 April 2017

Abstract

Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is one of the key innovations in the Neotropical family Bromeliaceae that has enabled many of its species to occupy seasonally water-limited terrestrial environments or microclimatically arid epiphytic niches. However, the relationship between CAM activity and the transport processes responsible for vacuolar organic-acid accumulation at night has not been systematically explored in this family. In the present investigation, ATP- and PPi-dependent proton transport rates were studied in tonoplast membrane vesicles isolated from leaves of six CAM and one C3 species of bromeliads. A consistent feature of these species was the high activity of the tonoplast ATP-driven H+ pump, which, when averaged across the seven species tested, showed a higher specific activity than the tonoplast PPi-driven H+ pump. For all CAM species, the rate of ATP-dependent proton transport into the tonoplast vesicles was strongly influenced by the nature of the balancing organic-acid anion, which displayed the following order of effectiveness: fumarate > malate > citrate. Measurements of leaf organic-acid content in six CAM bromeliads at dusk and dawn showed that nocturnal accumulation of malate exceeded citrate by a factor of ~2.4–20.0-fold in five of six bromeliad species used in this study, demonstrating a close correlation between the CAM rhythm and the intrinsic properties of the vacuolar membrane across which these organic acids are transported.

Additional keywords: Bromeliaceae, CAM plants, malate, proton pump, vacuoles.


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