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A Recombinant Plant Natriuretic Peptide Causes Rapid and Spatially Differentiated K+, Na+ and H+ Flux Changes in Arabidopsis thaliana Roots

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-16, 15:16 authored by Ludidi, N, Morse, M, Sayed, M, Wherrett, TC, Sergey ShabalaSergey Shabala, Gehring, C
Plant natriuretic peptides (PNPs) belong to a novel class of systemically mobile molecules that are structurally similar to the N-terminal domain of expansins and affect physiological processes such as protoplast volume regulation at nano-molar concentrations. Here we demonstrate that AtPNP-A, a recombinant Arabidopsis thaliana PNP causes rapid H+ influx in the elongation zone of A. thaliana roots but not in the mature zone. AtPNP-A also induces significant K+ and Na+ efflux and this effect is seen in the mature root zone only. These observations suggest that responses to AtPNP-A are developmental stage and tissue specific and point to a complex role in plant growth and homeostasis.

History

Publication title

Plant and Cell Physiology

Volume

45

Issue

8

Pagination

1093-1098

ISSN

0032-0781

Department/School

Tasmanian Institute of Agriculture (TIA)

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Place of publication

United Kingdom

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Environmentally sustainable plant production not elsewhere classified

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