International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2022)

Systematic Identification and Expression Analysis of the Sorghum <i>Pht1</i> Gene Family Reveals Several New Members Encoding High-Affinity Phosphate Transporters

  • Jinglong Zhang,
  • Yixin Shen,
  • Wei Chen,
  • Binqiang Bai,
  • Xiaomin Ji,
  • Yingjun Chi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232213855
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 22
p. 13855

Abstract

Read online

Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) is known to have a more robust capability of phosphorus uptake than many other cereal plants, which could be attributed to its phosphate transporter 1 (Pht1) that has a high phosphorus affinity. There are eleven SbPht1 genes in the sorghum genome, nine of which are expressed in sorghum roots or shoots in response to phosphorus deficiency (low-P). The molecular features of these nine genes were investigated by gene expression analysis, subcellular localization, and a yeast mutant complementation growth assay. They were found to be induced in response to low-P stress in root or shoot. All these SbPht1 proteins were found to be localized on the cell membrane, and SbPht1;8 was also detected in the endoplasmic reticulum. These SbPht1s were able to complement the yeast mutant EY917 that lacks all the functional phosphate transporters, and, among them, SbPht1;5, SbPht1;6 and SbPht1;8 could partially complement the yeast mutant strain EY917 in low-P conditions. Overall, these findings demonstrate that SbPht1;5, SbPht1;6, and SbPht1;8 are high-affinity phosphate transporters. SbPht1;5, in particular, is specifically involved in phosphorus uptake in the roots, whilst SbPht1;6 and SbPht1;8 are key players in both P uptake and P transport in response to low-P stress in sorghum.

Keywords