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Sulphate/proton cotransport in plasma-membrane vesicles isolated from roots of Brassica napus L.: increased transport in membranes isolated from sulphur-starved plants
Authors:Malcolm J Hawkesford  Jean-Claude Davidian  Claude Grignon
Institution:(1) Department of Agricultural Sciences, University of Bristol, AFRC Institute of Arable Crops Research, Long Ashton Research Station, BS18 9AF Long Ashton, Bristol, UK;(2) Biochimie et Physiologie Végétales, Ecole Nationale Supérieure Agronomique, INRA-CNRS (URA 573), F-34060, 1 Montpellier Cedex, France
Abstract:The characteristics of sulphate uptake into right-side-out plasma-membrane vesicles isolated from roots of Brassica napus L., Metzger, cv. Drakkar, and purified by aqueous polymer two-phase partitioning, were investigated. Sulphate uptake into the vesicles was driven by an artificially imposed pH gradient (acid outside), and could be observed for 5–10 min before a plateau was reached and no further net uptake occurred. The uptake was partially inhibited in the presence of depolarizing agents and little uptake was observed in the absence of an imposed pH gradient. Uptake was strongly pH-dependent, being greatest at more acidic pH. After imposition of a pH gradient, the capacity for uptake decreased slowly (t1/2>10 min). The uptake had a high-affinity component which was strongly dependent on the external proton concentration (K m=10μM at pH 5.0, 64 μM at pH 6.5). The K m for protons varied from 0.4–1.9 μM as the sulphate concentration was reduced from 33 to 1 μM. A low-affinity component was observed which could be resolved at low temperatures (0 °C). Microsomal membranes that partitioned into the lower phase of the two-phase system gave no indication of high-affinity sulphate transport. Sulphate uptake into plasma-membrane vesicles isolated from sulphur-starved plant material was approximately twofold greater than that observed in those isolated from sulphate-fed plant material. Isolated vesicles therefore mirror the well-known in-vivo response of roots, indicating an increase in the number of transporters to be, at least in part, the underlying cause of derepression.
Keywords:Brassica (sulphate transport)  Ion transport  Plasma membrane (root)  Sulphate transport (carrier  derepression)  Symport
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