The translocation of a chloride channel from the Golgi to the plasma membrane helps plants adapt to salt stress

Rajappa S, Krishnamurthy P, Huang H, Yu D, Friml J, Xu J, Kumar PP. 2024. The translocation of a chloride channel from the Golgi to the plasma membrane helps plants adapt to salt stress. Nature Communications. 15, 3978.

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Author
Rajappa, Sivamathini; Krishnamurthy, Pannaga; Huang, Hua; Yu, Dejie; Friml, JiríISTA ; Xu, Jian; Kumar, Prakash P.
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Abstract
A key mechanism employed by plants to adapt to salinity stress involves maintaining ion homeostasis via the actions of ion transporters. While the function of cation transporters in maintaining ion homeostasis in plants has been extensively studied, little is known about the roles of their anion counterparts in this process. Here, we describe a mechanism of salt adaptation in plants. We characterized the chloride channel (CLC) gene AtCLCf, whose expression is regulated by WRKY transcription factor under salt stress in Arabidopsis thaliana. Loss-of-function atclcf seedlings show increased sensitivity to salt, whereas AtCLCf overexpression confers enhanced resistance to salt stress. Salt stress induces the translocation of GFP-AtCLCf fusion protein to the plasma membrane (PM). Blocking AtCLCf translocation using the exocytosis inhibitor brefeldin-A or mutating the small GTPase gene AtRABA1b/BEX5 (RAS GENES FROM RAT BRAINA1b homolog) increases salt sensitivity in plants. Electrophysiology and liposome-based assays confirm the Cl−/H+ antiport function of AtCLCf. Therefore, we have uncovered a mechanism of plant adaptation to salt stress involving the NaCl-induced translocation of AtCLCf to the PM, thus facilitating Cl− removal at the roots, and increasing the plant’s salinity tolerance.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2024-05-10
Journal Title
Nature Communications
Publisher
Springer Nature
Acknowledgement
The authors thank Drs. Akihiko Nakano and Tomohiro Uemura (RIKEN and Ochanomizu University, Japan) for providing plant material (seeds of GFP-RABA1bQ72L GFP-RABA1bS27N), Dr. Prakash Arumugam (SIFBI, A*STAR, Singapore) for providing the yeast strains used in this study, and Dr. Jobichen Chacko for help with homology model building. We thank Prof. Elliot Meyerowitz (Caltech) and Dr. On Sun Lau (NUS) for critical reading of our manuscript. The National University of Singapore provided partial financial support as grant number A−8000149-03-00, and PhD research scholarship to S.R.
Volume
15
Article Number
3978
eISSN
IST-REx-ID

Cite this

Rajappa S, Krishnamurthy P, Huang H, et al. The translocation of a chloride channel from the Golgi to the plasma membrane helps plants adapt to salt stress. Nature Communications. 2024;15. doi:10.1038/s41467-024-48234-z
Rajappa, S., Krishnamurthy, P., Huang, H., Yu, D., Friml, J., Xu, J., & Kumar, P. P. (2024). The translocation of a chloride channel from the Golgi to the plasma membrane helps plants adapt to salt stress. Nature Communications. Springer Nature. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-48234-z
Rajappa, Sivamathini, Pannaga Krishnamurthy, Hua Huang, Dejie Yu, Jiří Friml, Jian Xu, and Prakash P. Kumar. “The Translocation of a Chloride Channel from the Golgi to the Plasma Membrane Helps Plants Adapt to Salt Stress.” Nature Communications. Springer Nature, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-48234-z.
S. Rajappa et al., “The translocation of a chloride channel from the Golgi to the plasma membrane helps plants adapt to salt stress,” Nature Communications, vol. 15. Springer Nature, 2024.
Rajappa S, Krishnamurthy P, Huang H, Yu D, Friml J, Xu J, Kumar PP. 2024. The translocation of a chloride channel from the Golgi to the plasma membrane helps plants adapt to salt stress. Nature Communications. 15, 3978.
Rajappa, Sivamathini, et al. “The Translocation of a Chloride Channel from the Golgi to the Plasma Membrane Helps Plants Adapt to Salt Stress.” Nature Communications, vol. 15, 3978, Springer Nature, 2024, doi:10.1038/s41467-024-48234-z.
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