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1.
The effects of amiloride and a series of amiloride analogs have been tested on the Na+/H+ antiport activity in intact vacuoles and tonoplast vesicles isolated from sugar beet cell suspension cultures. There is a competitive interaction between amiloride analogs and sodium. Substitution of one or both H-atoms of the 5-amino group of amiloride (apparent Ki about 150 micromolar) resulted in a 3- to 200-fold increase in inhibitory potency of the antiport activity.  相似文献   

2.
NaCl Induces a Na/H Antiport in Tonoplast Vesicles from Barley Roots   总被引:22,自引:10,他引:12       下载免费PDF全文
Evidence was found for a Na+/H+ antiport in tonoplast vesicles isolated from barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv California Mariout 72) roots. The activity of the antiport was observed only in membranes from roots that were grown in NaCl. Measurements of acridine orange fluorescence were used to estimate relative proton influx and efflux from the vesicles. Addition of MgATP to vesicles from a tonoplast-enriched fraction caused the formation of a pH gradient, interior acid, across the vesicle membranes. EDTA was added to inhibit the ATPase, by chelating Mg2+, and the pH gradient gradually dissipated. When 50 millimolar K+ or Na+ was added along with the EDTA to vesicles from control roots, the salts caused a slight increase in the rate of dissipation of the pH gradient, as did the addition of 50 millimolar K+ to vesicles from salt-grown roots. However, when 50 millimolar Na+ was added to vesicles from salt-grown roots it caused a 7-fold increase in the proton efflux. Inclusion of 20 millimolar K+ and 1 micromolar valinomycin in the assay buffer did not affect this rapid Na+/H+ exchange. The Na+/H+ exchange rate for vesicles from salt-grown roots showed saturation kinetics with respect to Na+ concentration, with an apparent Km for Na+ of 9 millimolar. The rate of Na+/H+ exchange with 10 millimolar Na+ was inhibited 97% by 0.1 millimolar dodecyltriethylammonium.  相似文献   

3.
Na+ transport across the tonoplast and its accumulation in the vacuoles is of crucial importance for plant adaptation to salinity. Mild and severe salt stress increased both ATP- and PPi-dependent H+ transport in tonoplast vesicles from sunflower seedling roots, suggesting the possibility that a Na+/H+ antiport system could be operating in such vesicles under salt conditions (E. Ballesteros et al. 1996. Physiol. Plant. 97: 259–268). During a mild salt stress, Na+ was mainly accumulated in the roots. Under a more severe salt treatment, Na+ was equally distributed in shoots and roots. In contrast to what was observed with Na+, all the salt treatments reduced the shoot K+ content. Dissipation by Na+ of the H+ gradient generated by the tonoplast H+-ATPase, monitored as fluorescence quenching of acridine orange, was used to measure Na+/H+ exchange across tonoplast-enriched vesicles isolated by sucrose gradient centrifugation from sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) roots treated for 3 days with different NaCl regimes. Salt treatments induced a Na+/H+ exchange activity, which displayed saturation kinetics for Na+ added to the assay medium. This activity was partially inhibited by 125 μM amiloride, a competitive inhibitor of Na+/H+ antiports. No Na+/H+ exchange was detected in vesicles from control roots. The activity was specific for Na+. since K+ added to the assay medium slightly dissipated H+ gradients and displayed non-saturating kinetics for all salt treatments. Apparent Km for Na+/H+ exchange in tonoplast vesicles from 150 mM NaCl-treated roots was lower than that of 75 mM NaCl-treated roots, Vmax remaining unchanged. The results suggest that the existence of a specific Na+/H+ exchange activity in tonoplast-enriched vesicle fractions, induced by salt stress, could represent an adaptative response in sunflower plants, moderately tolerant to salinity.  相似文献   

4.
Calcium transport into tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill, cv Castlemart) fruit tonoplast vesicles was studied. Calcium uptake was stimulated approximately 10-fold by MgATP. Two ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport activities could be resolved on the basis of sensitivity to nitrate and affinity for Ca2+. A low affinity Ca2+ uptake system (Km > 200 micromolar) was inhibited by nitrate and ionophores and is thought to represent a tonoplast localized H+/Ca2+ antiport. A high affinity Ca2+ uptake system (Km = 6 micromolar) was not inhibited by nitrate, had reduced sensitivity to ionophores, and appeared to be associated with a population of low density endoplasmic reticulum vesicles that contaminated the tonoplast-enriched membrane fraction. Arrhenius plots of the temperature dependence of Ca2+ transport in tomato membrane vesicles showed a sharp increase in activation energy at temperatures below 10 to 12°C that was not observed in red beet membrane vesicles. This low temperature effect on tonoplast Ca2+/H+ antiport activity could only by partially ascribed to an effect of low temperature on H+-ATPase activity, ATP-dependent H+ transport, passive H+ fluxes, or passive Ca2+ fluxes. These results suggest that low temperature directly affects Ca2+/H+ exchange across the tomato fruit tonoplast, resulting in an apparent change in activation energy for the transport reaction. This could result from a direct effect of temperature on the Ca2+/H+ exchange protein or by an indirect effect of temperature on lipid interactions with the Ca2+/H+ exchange protein.  相似文献   

5.
The pH-dependent fluorescence quenching of acridine orange was used to study the Na+- and K+-dependent H+ fluxes in tonoplast vesicles isolated from storage tissue of red beet and sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.). The Na+-dependent H+ flux across the tonoplast membrane could be resolved into two components: (a) a membrane potential-mediated flux through conductive pathways; and (b) an electroneutral flux which showed Michaelis-Menten kinetics relationship to Na+ concentration and was competitively inhibited by amiloride (Ki = 0.1 millimolar). The potential-dependent component of H+ flux showed an approximately linear dependence on Na+ concentration. In contrast, the K+-dependent H+ flux apparently consisted of a single component which showed an approximately linear dependence on K+ concentration, and was insensitive to amiloride. Based on the Na+- and K+-dependent H+ fluxes, the passive permeability of the vesicle preparation to Na+ was about half of that to K+.

The apparent Km for Na+ of the electroneutral Na+/H+ exchange varied by more than 3-fold (7.5-26.5 millimolar) when the internal and external pH values were changed in parallel. The results suggest a simple kinetic model for the operation of the Na+/H+ antiport which can account for the estimated in vivo accumulation ratio for Na+ into the vacuole.

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6.
We present evidence strongly suggesting that a proton gradient (acid inside) is used to drive an electroneutral, substrate-specific, K+/H+ antiport in both tonoplast and plasma membrane-enriched vesicles obtained from oilseed rape (Brassica napus) hypocotyls. Proton fluxes into and out of the vesicles were monitored both by following the quenching and restoration of quinacrine fluorescence (indicating a transmembrane pH gradient) and of oxonol V fluorescence (indicating membrane potential.) Supply of K+ (with Cl or SCN) after a pH gradient had been established across the vesicle membrane by provision of ATP to the H+-ATPase dissipated the transmembrane pH gradient but did not depolarize the positive membrane potential. Evidence that the K+/H+ exchange thus indicated could not be accounted for by mere electric coupling included the findings that, first, no positive potential was generated when KSCN or KCl was supplied, even in the absence of 100 millimolar Cl and, second, efflux of K+ from K+-loaded vesicles drives intravesicular accumulation of H+ against the electrochemical potential gradient. Neither was the exchange due to competition between K+ and quinacrine for membrane sites, nor to inhibition of the H+-ATPase. Thus, it is likely that it was effected by a membrane component. The exchanger utilized primarily K+ (at micromolar concentrations); Na+/H+ antiport was detected only at concentrations two orders of magnitude higher. Rb+, Li+, or Cs+ were ineffective. Dependence of tonoplast K+/H+ antiport on K+ concentration was complex, showing saturation at 10 millimolar K+ and inhibition by concentrations higher than 25 millimolar. Antiport activity was associated both with tonoplast-enriched membrane vesicles (where the proton pump was inhibited by more than 80% by 50 millimolar NO3 and showed no sensitivity to vanadate or oligomycin) and with plasma membrane-enriched fractions prepared by phase separation followed by separation on a sucrose gradient (where the proton pump was vanadate and diethylstilbestrol-sensitive but showed no sensitivity to NO3 or oligomycin). The possible physiological role of such a K+/H+ exchange mechanism is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Cell suspension cultures of sugar beet were grown at various salinities (0-200 millimolar NaCl). Their tolerance to Na+ was comparable to that of the intact plant. Tonoplast vesicles were prepared by sucrose density gradient centrifugation of microsomal membranes and shown to be highly purified. The vesicles were subjected to a pH jump in the presence of acridine orange and the rate of recovery of fluorescence after addition of Na+ was used as a measure of Na+-dependent H+ efflux. In the presence of K+ and valinomycin, the Na+/H+ antiport showed saturation kinetics. Increasing Na+ in the growth medium did not change the apparent Km for Na+, but increased Vmax to about twice the control value, suggesting a specific induction of antiport synthesis by salt.  相似文献   

8.
The vacuolar pH and the trans-tonoplast ΔpH modifications induced by the activity of the two proton pumps H+-ATPase and H+-PPase and by the proton exchanges catalyzed by the Na+/H+ and Ca2+/H+ antiports at the tonoplast of isolated intact vacuoles prepared from Catharanthus roseus cells enriched in inorganic phosphate (Y Mathieu et al 1988 Plant Physiol [in press]) were measured using the 31P NMR technique. The H+-ATPase induced an intravacuolar acidification as large as 0.8 pH unit, building a trans-tonoplast ΔpH up to 2.2 pH units. The hydrolysis of the phosphorylated substrate and the vacuolar acidification were monitored simultaneously to estimate kinetically the apparent stoichiometry between the vectorial proton pumping and the hydrolytic activity of the H+-ATPase. A ratio of H+ translocated/ATP hydrolyzed of 1.97 ± 0.06 (mean ± standard error) was calculated. Pyrophosphate-treated vacuoles were also acidified to a significant extent. The H+-PPase at 2 millimolar PPi displayed hydrolytic and vectorial activities comparable to those of the H+-ATPase, building a steady state ΔpH of 2.1 pH units. Vacuoles incubated in the presence of 10 millimolar Na+ were alkalinized by 0.4 to 0.8 pH unit. It has been shown by using 23Na NMR that sodium uptake was coupled to the H+ efflux and occurred against rather large concentration gradients. For the first time, the activity of the Ca2+/H+ antiport has been measured on isolated intact vacuoles. Ca2+ uptake was strongly inhibited by NH4Cl or gramicidin. Vacuoles incubated with 1 millimolar Ca2+ were alkalinized by about 0.6 pH unit and this H+ efflux was associated to a Ca2+ uptake as demonstrated by measuring the external Ca2+ concentration with a calcium specific electrode. Steady state accumulation ratios of Ca2+ as high as 100 were reached for steady state external concentrations about 200 micromolar. The rate of Ca2+ uptake appeared markedly amplified in intact vacuoles when compared to tonoplast vesicles but the antiport displayed a much lower affinity for calcium. The different behavior of intact vacuoles compared to vesicles appears mainly to be due to differences in the surface to volume ratio and in the rates of dissipation of the pH gradient. Despite its low affinity, the Ca2+/H+ antiport has a high potential capacity to regulate cytoplasmic concentration of calcium.  相似文献   

9.
Proton transport is often visualized in membrane vesicles by use of fluorescent monoamines which accumulate in acidic intravesicular compartments and undergo concentration-dependent fluorescence quenching. Software for an IBM microcomputer is described which permits logging and editing of changes in fluorescence monitored by a Perkin-Elmer LS-5 luminescence spectrometer. An accurate estimate of the instantaneous rate of fluorescence quenching or recovery is then facilitated by least squares fitting of fluorescence data to a nonlinear function. The software is tested with tonoplast vesicles from Beta vulgaris. Quenching of acridine orange fluorescence by ATP-driven (primary) transport and relaxation of quenching by Na+/H+ antiport can both be fitted with single exponential functions. Initial rates of ATP- and Na+ -dependent fluorescence changes are derived and can be used for Km determinations. The method constitutes a simple and efficient alternative to manual analysis of analog fluorescence traces and results in a reliable quantitative measurement of the relative rate of proton transport in membrane vesicle preparations.  相似文献   

10.
The absorbance change of the weak base dye probe, Acridine orange, was used to monitor alterations of pH gradients across renal brush border membrane vesicles. The presence of Na+/H+ or Li+/H+ exchange was demonstrated by diluting Na2SO4 or Li2SO4 loaded vesicles into Na+- or Li+-free solutions, which caused dye uptake. About 20% of the uptake was abolished by lipid permeable cations such as valinomycin-K+ or tetraphenylphosphonium, indicating perhaps the presence of a finite Na+ conductance smaller than electroneutral Na+/H+ exchange. The protonophore tetrachlorosalicylanilide raised the rate of dye uptake under these conditions, hence the presence of an Na+ conductance greater than the H+ conductance was suggested. K+ gradients also induced changes of pH, at about 10% of the Na+ or Li+ rate. Partial inhibition (21%) was seen with 0.1 mM amiloride indicating that K+ was a low affinity substrate for the Na+/H+ exchange. Acceleration both by tetrachlorosalicylanilide (2-fold) and valinomycin (4-fold) suggested the presence of 2 classes of vesicles, those with high and those with low K+ conductance. The larger magnitude of the valinomycin dependent signal suggested that 75% of the vesicles had a low K+ conductance. Inward Cl? gradients also induced acidification, partially inhibited by the presence of tetraphenylphosphonium, and accelerated by tetrachlorosalicylanilide. Thus both a Cl? conductance greater than the H+ conductance and a Cl?/OH? exchange were present. The rate of Na+/H+ exchange was amiloride sensitive with a pH optimum of 6.5 and an apparent Km for Na+ or Li+ of about 10 mM and an EA of 14.3 kcal per mol. A 61-fold Na2SO4 gradient resulted in a pH gradient of 1.64 units which increased to 1.8 with gramicidin. An equivalent NaCl gradient gave a much lower ΔpH even in the presence of gramicidin showing that the H+ and Cl? pathways could alter the effects of the Na+/H+ exchange.  相似文献   

11.
Schumaker KS  Sze H 《Plant physiology》1985,79(4):1111-1117
Two types of ATP-dependent calcium (Ca2+) transport systems were detected in sealed microsomal vesicles from oat roots. Approximately 80% of the total Ca2+ uptake was associated with vesicles of 1.11 grams per cubic centimeter and was insensitive to vanadate or azide, but inhibited by NO3. The remaining 20% was vanadate-sensitive and mostly associated with the endoplasmic reticulum, as the transport activity comigrated with an endoplasmic reticulum marker (antimycin A-insensitive NADH cytochrome c reductase), which was shifted from 1.11 to 1.20 grams per cubic centimeter by Mg2+.

Like the tonoplast H+-ATPase activity, vanadate-insensitive Ca2+ accumulation was stimulated by 20 millimolar Cl and inhibited by 10 micromolar 4,4′-diisothiocyano-2,2′-stilbene disulfonic acid or 50 micromolar N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. This Ca2+ transport system had an apparent Km for Mg-ATP of 0.24 millimolar similar to the tonoplast ATPase. The vanadate-insensitive Ca2+ transport was abolished by compounds that eliminated a pH gradient and Ca2+ dissipated a pH gradient (acid inside) generated by the tonoplast-type H+-ATPase. These results provide compelling evidence that a pH gradient generated by the H+-ATPase drives Ca2+ accumulation into right-side-out tonoplast vesicles via a Ca2+/H+ antiport. This transport system was saturable with respect to Ca2+ (Km apparent = 14 micromolar). The Ca2+/H+ antiport operated independently of the H+-ATPase since an artifically imposed pH gradient (acid inside) could also drive Ca2+ accumulation. Ca2+ transport by this system may be one major way in which vacuoles function in Ca2+ homeostasis in the cytoplasm of plant cells.

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12.
Proton fluxes have been followed into and out of membrane vesicles isolated from the roots of the halophyte Atriplex nummularia and the glycophyte Gossypium hirsutum, with the aid of the ΔpH probe [14C]methylamine. Evidence is presented for the operation of Na+/H+ and K+/H+ antiporters in the membranes of both plants. Cation supply after a pH gradient has been set up across the vesicle membrane (either as a result of providing ATP to the H+-ATPase or by imposing an artificial pH gradient) brings about dissipation of the ΔpH, but does not depolarize the membrane potential as observed in similar experiments, but in the absence of Cl, using the ΔΨ probe SCN. Cation/H+ exchange is thus indicated. This exchange is not due to nonspecific electric coupling, nor to competition for anionic adsorption sites on the membrane, nor to inhibition of the H+-ATPase; coupling of the opposed cation and H+ fluxes by a membrane component is the most likely explanation. Saturation kinetics have been observed for both Na+/H+ and K+/H+ antiport in Atriplex. Moreover, additive effects are obtained when Na+ is supplied together with saturating concentrations of K+, and vice versa, suggesting that separate antiporters for Na+ and for K+ may be operating. In the case of both Atriplex and Gossypium evidence was obtained suggesting the presence of antiporters in both plasmalemma and tonoplast.  相似文献   

13.
A H+-translocating inorganic pyrophosphatase (H+-PPase) was associated with low density membranes enriched in tonoplast vesicles of oat roots. The H+-PPase catalyzed the electrogenic transport of H+ into the vesicles, generating a pH gradient, inside acid (quinacrine fluorescence quenching), and a membrane potential, inside positive (Oxonol V fluorescence quenching). Transport activity was dependent on cations with a selectivity sequence of Rb+ = K+ > Cs+; but it was inhibited by Na+ or Li+. Maximum rates of transport required at least 20 millimolar K+ and the Km for this ion was 4 millimolar. Fluoride inhibited both ΔpH formation and K+-dependent PPase activity with an I50 of 1 to 2 millimolar. Inhibitors of the anion-sensitive, tonoplast-type H+-ATPase (e.g. a disulfonic stilbene or NO3) had no effect on the PPase activity. Vanadate and azide were also ineffective. H+-pumping PPase was inhibited by 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole and N-ethylmaleimide, but its sensitivity to N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide was variable. The sensitivity to ions and inhibitors suggests that the tonoplast H+-PPase and the H+-ATPase are distinct activities and this was confirmed when they were physically separated after Triton X-100 solubilization and Sepharose CL-6B chromatography. H+ pumping activity was strongly affected by Mg2+ and pyrophosphate (PPi) concentrations. At 5 millimolar Mg2+, H+ pumping showed a KmaPP for PPi of 15 micromolar. The rate of H+ pumping at 60 micromolar PPi was often equivalent to that at 1.5 millimolar ATP. The results suggest PPi hydrolysis could provide another source of a proton motive force used for solute transport and other energy-requiring processes across the tonoplast and other membranes with H+-PPase.  相似文献   

14.
Calcium is sequestered into vacuoles of oat (Avena sativa L.) root cells via a H+/Ca2+ antiporter, and vesicles derived from the vacuolar membrane (tonoplast) catalyze an uptake of calcium which is dependent on protons (pH gradient [ΔpH] dependent). The first step toward purification and identification of the H+/Ca2+ antiporter is to solubilize and reconstitute the transport activity in liposomes. The vacuolar H+/Ca2+ antiporter was solubilized with octylglucoside in the presence of soybean phospholipids and glycerol. After centrifugation, the soluble proteins were reconstituted into liposomes by detergent dilution. A ΔpH (acid inside) was generated in the proteoliposomes with an NH4Cl gradient (NH4+in » NH4+out) as determined by methylamine uptake. Fundamental properties of ΔpH dependent calcium uptake such as the Km for calcium (~15 micromolar) and the sensitivity to inhibitors such as N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, ruthenium red, and lanthanum, were similar to those found in membrane vesicles, indicating that the H+/Ca2+ antiporter has been reconstituted in active form.  相似文献   

15.
Salinity stress is one of the most serious factors limiting the productivity of agricultural crops. A possible survival strategy of plants under saline conditions is to sequester excess Na+ in the vacuole by vacuolar Na+/H+ antiport using a pH gradient generated by H+-ATPasc (EC 3.6.1.35) and H+-Pyrophosphatase (H+-PPase; EC 3.6.1.1) to maintain a higher K+/Na+ ratio in cytoplasm. The effect of exogenously applied polyamines (PAs) in stabilizing root tonoplast integrity and function against salt stress in the barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) seedlings was investigated. The NaCl-induced reductions in the contents of phospholipids and PAs in tonoplast vesicles isolated from barely seedling roots, as well as the activities of H+-ATPase, H+-PPase and vacuolar Na+/H+ antiport were all partially restored by the application of 0.5 mM putrescine and 0.5 mM spermidine, especially the former. The above results indicated that one of the mechanisms involved in attenuating salt injury in barley seedlings by exogenous PAs application was to maintain tonoplast integrity and function under saline conditions. Moreover, the possible mechanism involved in counteracting detrimental effects of salt on the barley seedlings by the application of exogenous PAs was discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Exposure of Ehrlich cells to isotonic Na+-propionate medium induces a rapid cell swelling. This treatment is likely to impose an acid load on the cells. Cell swelling is absent in K+-propionate medium but may be induced by the ionophore nigericin, which mediates K+/H+ exchange. Cell swelling in Na+-propionate medium is blocked by amiloride, but an alternative pathway is introduced by addition of the ionophore monensin, which mediates Na+/H+ exchange. Consequently, swelling of Ehrlich cells in Na+-propionate medium is due to the operation of an amiloride-sensitive, Na+-specific mechanism. It is concluded that this mechanism is a Na+/H+ exchange system, activated by cytoplasmic acidification. We have previously demonstrated that the heavy metal salt CuSO4 in micromolar concentrations inhibits regulatory volume decrease (RVD) of Ehrlich cells following hypotonic swelling. The present work shows that CuSO4 inhibits RVD as a result of a net uptake of sodium, of which the major part is sensitive to amiloride. Measurements of intracellular pH show that CuSO4 causes significant cytoplasmic alkalinization, which is abolished by amiloride. Concomitantly, CuSO4 causes an amiloride-sensitive net proton efflux from the cells. The combined results confirm that a Na+/H+ exchange system exists in Ehrlich cells and demonstrate that the heavy metal salt CuSO4 activates this Na+/H+ exchange system.  相似文献   

17.
Lutoids represent a lysosomal microvacuolar compartment of rubber-tree (Hevea brasiliensis) latex. We observed acidification of isolated vesicles after imposing an outward Mg2+ diffusion gradient and dissipation of a preformed pH gradient in the presence of exogenous Mg2+. These results suggest the presence of a Mg2+/H+ antiporter. The maximum Mg2+/H+ exchange rate was observed at pH 8.5. The Km values for Mg2+ (2.6 mm) were identical for both influx and efflux experiments. When membrane potential was clamped at zero with K+ and valinomycin, the response of the membrane potential probe oxonol VI showed that the Mg2+/H+ exchange was electroneutral. Mg2+/H+ exchange was inhibited by amiloride and imipramine. Both the inhibiting concentration range and the Km for Mg2+ are similar to those reported for the Mg2+/2Na+ antiporter in animals cell. These data are consistent with the existence of a Mg2+/2H+ antiporter in a plant tonoplast.  相似文献   

18.
Artificial pH gradients across tonoplast vesicles isolated from storage tissue of red beet (Beta vulgaris L.) were used to study the kinetics of a Ca2+/H+ antiport across this membrane. Ca2+-dependent H+ fluxes were measured by the pH-dependent fluorescence quenching of acridine orange. ΔpH-dependent Ca2+ influx was measured radiometrically. Both H+ efflux and Ca2+ influx displayed saturation kinetics and an identical dependence on external calcium with apparent Km values of 43.9 and 41.7 micromolar, respectively. Calcium influx was unaffected by an excess of Mg2+ but was inhibited by La3+ > Mn2+ > Cd2+. The apparent Km for external calcium was greatly affected (5-fold) by internal pH in the range of 6.0 to 6.5 and a transmembrane effect of internal proton binding on the affinity for external calcium is suggested.  相似文献   

19.
Salinity stress is one of the most serous factors limiting the productivity of agricultural crops. Previous studies have shown that exogenous fatty acids (EFAs) enhanced plant performance in saline environment. However, the mechanisms remained unclear. This study aimed to investigate whether EFAs (palmitic and linoleic acids) had ameliorating effects on salt injury in NaCl-treated barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) seedlings, and to explore the possible mechanisms by determining tonoplast composition and function. The results showed that linoleic acid at 1 mmol l−1 in culture solution possessed protective effects on root tonoplast function against salt stress in the barley seedlings; this was accompanied with a significant suppression of the degradation of phospholipids and PAs in tonoplast vesicles. Moreover, these salt-ameliorating effects of linoleic acid on tonoplast function were also indicated by the increase in H+-ATPase and H+-PPase activities. In response to the changes in membrane bound enzyme activities, an augmentation in the activity of a vacuolar Na+/H+ antiport was occurred by the application of linoleic acid under saline conditions. These findings suggested that the application of linoleic acid exhibited protective effects on tonoplast function in the barley seedlings under salt stress, perhaps due partly to suppress the degradation of phospholipids and PAs in tonoplast vesicles, thus leading partial restorations in the activities of vacuolar H+-ATPase, H+-PPase and Na+/H+ antiport.  相似文献   

20.
The properties of the vacuolar membrane (tonoplast) ion channels of sugar beet (Beta vulgaries) cell cultures were studied using the patch-clamp technique. Tonoplast currents displayed inward rectification in the whole vacuole and isolated outside-out patch configurations and permeability ratios PK+/PNa+ = 1 and PK+/PCl− = 5. Amiloride and two of its analogs, 5-(N-methyl-N-isobutyl)-amiloride and benzamil, inhibitors of Na+ channels in animal systems, blocked inward currents by reducing single-channel openings. Concentrations for 50% inhibition of vacuolar currents of 730 nanomolar, 130 nanomolar, and 1.5 micromolar for amiloride, benzamil, and 5-(N-methyl-N-isobutyl)-amiloride, respectively, were obtained from whole-vacuole recordings. The high inhibitory action (affinity) of amiloride and its analogs for the tonoplast cation channel suggests that these compounds could be used for the isolation and biochemical characterization of this protein.  相似文献   

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