Genes (Jun 2022)

The Sweetpotato Voltage-Gated K<sup>+</sup> Channel β Subunit, KIbB1, Positively Regulates Low-K<sup>+</sup> and High-Salinity Tolerance by Maintaining Ion Homeostasis

  • Hong Zhu,
  • Xue Yang,
  • Qiyan Li,
  • Jiayu Guo,
  • Tao Ma,
  • Shuyan Liu,
  • Shunyu Lin,
  • Yuanyuan Zhou,
  • Chunmei Zhao,
  • Jingshan Wang,
  • Jiongming Sui

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes13061100
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
p. 1100

Abstract

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Voltage-gated K+ channel β subunits act as a structural component of Kin channels in different species. The β subunits are not essential to the channel activity but confer different properties through binding the T1 domain or the C-terminal of α subunits. Here, we studied the physiological function of a novel gene, KIbB1, encoding a voltage-gated K+ channel β subunit in sweetpotato. The transcriptional level of this gene was significantly higher in the low-K+-tolerant line than that in the low-K+-sensitive line under K+ deficiency conditions. In Arabidopsis, KIbB1 positively regulated low-K+ tolerance through regulating K+ uptake and translocation. Under high-salinity stress, the growth conditions of transgenic lines were obviously better than wild typr (WT). Enzymatic and non-enzymatic reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavenging were activated in transgenic plants. Accordingly, the malondialdehyde (MDA) content and the accumulation of ROS such as H2O2 and O2− were lower in transgenic lines under salt stress. It was also found that the overexpression of KIbB1 enhanced K+ uptake, but the translocation from root to shoot was not affected under salt stress. This demonstrates that KIbB1 acted as a positive regulator in high-salinity stress resistance through regulating Na+ and K+ uptake to maintain K+/Na+ homeostasis. These results collectively suggest that the mechanisms of KIbB1 in regulating K+ were somewhat different between low-K+ and high-salinity conditions.

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