Abstract

AbstractUsing the patch‐clamp technique, we investigated the transport properties of vacuolar ion channels from the roots of water hyacinth, Eichhornia crassipes (Mart. Solms, Pontederiacae). Eichhornia crassipes vacuoles displayed large voltage‐dependent rectifying slow‐vacuolar (SV) currents, which activated in a few seconds at positive potentials and deactivated at negative voltages in a few hundreds of millseconds. Similarly to SV channel previously identified in the tonoplast of terrestrial plants, SV currents in E. crassipes were activated by micromolar concentrations of Ca2+ and current slightly increased (25%) on addition (10 mm) of the reducing agent dithiothreitol (DTT). Eichhornia crassipes SV channels were equally permeable to K+ and Na+. The permeability sequence derived from current values is: K+ ≈ Na+ > Rb+ > NH4+ ≈ Cs+ >> TEA+. Excised membrane patches displayed single channel transitions typical of SV‐type single channel openings with a conductance of (83·0 ± 5·6) pS; a smaller channel with a conductance of (31·0 ± 2·7) pS was also identified. Metals such as Ni2+ and Zn2+ decreased the vacuolar current in a reversible manner. However, although Zn2+ inhibition is comparable to that induced by the same metal in vacuoles from the main root of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.), the inhibition of the SV currents by Ni2+ is not as substantial in E. crassipes as in sugar beet. To our knowledge, this is the first electrophysiological characterization of ionic transport in E. crassipes, a pervasive troublesome aquatic weed, which has exceptional absorption properties of several water contaminants such as heavy metals, pesticides and phenols.

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