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Functional Plant Biology Functional Plant Biology Society
Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

K+ transport by Arabidopsis root hairs at low pH

Olga Babourina, Barbara Hawkins, Roger R. Lew, Ian Newman and Sergey Shabala

Australian Journal of Plant Physiology 28(7) 637 - 643
Published: 2001

Abstract

Mechanisms underlying changed K + uptake by plantsat low pH need to be deciphered. One possibility is that K+ acquisition is under the strict control of plasmamembrane potential (E m ), which,in turn, is affected by external pH. To test this hypothesis, we used themicroelectrode ion flux measurement (MIFE ) technique tostudy net K + and H +fluxes near Arabidopsis root hairs at different externalpH, KCl concentrations and clamped Em . Lowering the solution pH led to strong H+ influx, K + efflux andsignificant E m depolarisation.Addition of K + to the bathing media causedsignificant net K + uptake when external pH wasover the range 5.5–6.0. At external pH below 5.0, however, correlationbetween K + availability and net K+ uptake was negative. To explain this apparentparadox, measurements of net K + and H+ fluxes from the root hair surface were performedconcurrently with E m clamped at different values above and below the restingpotential (approx. –180 mV). Our data revealed a strong dependence ofnet K + flux on the clamping voltage. Clamping atvalues more negative than the resting potential caused a significant increasein K + uptake into the root hair; clamping at lessnegative values (–20 and 0 mV) caused significant net K+ efflux from the cell. Qualitatively similarresults were observed for net H + flux. Ourobservations indicate direct control of K + flux bychanging E m , and suggest thatE m depolarisation could be themain reason for the observed K + efflux at low pH.

Keywords: Arabidopsis, K+transport, low pH, membrane potential, root hair, voltage clamp.

https://doi.org/10.1071/PP01018

© CSIRO 2001

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