Abstract
Ion transport across the plasma membrane of suspension-culture cells derived from immature barley embryos has been studied in low (15 mM KCl) and high (additional 150 mM NaCl) salt conditions to understand how plants discriminate between K(+) and Na(+) during ion uptake. In both media about 50% of the cells exhibited resting potentials more negative than any of the passive diffusion potentials. In whole-cell patch clamp experiments membrane hyperpolarization activated large inward currents. Whilst the instantaneous current components did not discriminate between K(+) and Na(+), the time-dependent current, I(in), was selective for K(+) over Na(+). Further analysis of I(in) revealed the following properties: double exponential current activation (time-constants 0.03 s and 0.3 s, half activation potential - 171 mV); no inactivation; complete block by Ba(2+) (30 mM in 100 mM KCl) and part block by TEA(+) (maximum 50% with 20 mM); dependence on millimolar concentrations of cytoplasmic ATP; no block by external or cytoplasmic Na(+). The selectivity sequences K(+) ≫ Rb(+) > NH(+)(4) > Na(+) ≫ Cl(-) and K(+) ≫ NH(+)(4) > Na(+) > Rb(+) were determined from measurements of reversal potentials and relative steady-state currents respectively. P(Na):P(K) was 0.07 ± 0.02 (from reversal potentials) and I(Na):I(K) was 0.17 + 0.05 (from relative currents). A high variance among the observed permeability ratios suggested that several channels with different ion-selectivities contributed to the time-dependent whole-cell currents. In single channel experiments, several inward channels with distinct properties were found. The major channels were (i) a voltage-gated, K(+)-selective channel (12 pS), (ii) an ATP-activated non-selective cation channel (7 pS) and (iii) an inward-rectifying anion-channel (150 pS, all unitary conductances given for 100 mM KCI). No significant differences were found in whole-cell currents or single-channel characteristics between cells that had been adapted to a high-salt growth-medium (150 mM NaCl) and non-adapted cells. The idea that differential regulation of plasma membrane ion channels gives rise to a physiological flexibility, allowing the cells to control Na(+) uptake under varying external conditions, is discussed.
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.