Plants take up large amounts of K from the soil solution and distribute it to the cells of all organs, where it fulfills important
physiological functions. Transport of K from the soil solution to its final destination is mediated by channels and
transporters. To better understand K movements in plants, we intended to characterize the function of the large
KT-HAK-KUP family of transporters in rice (Oryza sativa cv Nipponbare). By searching in databases and cDNA cloning, we
have identified 17 genes (OsHAK1–17) encoding transporters of this family and obtained evidence of the existence of other
two genes. Phylogenetic analysis of the encoded transporters reveals a great diversity among them, and three distant
transporters, OsHAK1, OsHAK7, and OsHAK10, were expressed in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and bacterial mutants to
determine their functions. The three transporters mediate K influxes or effluxes, depending on the conditions of the
experiment. A comparative kinetic analysis of HAK-mediated K influx in yeast and in roots of K -starved rice seedlings
demonstrated the involvement of HAK transporters in root K uptake. We discuss that all HAK transporters may mediate
K transport, but probably not only in the plasma membrane. Transient expression of the OsHAK10-green fluorescent
protein fusion protein in living onion epidermal cells targeted this protein to the tonoplast.
This work was supported by the Consejería de Educación y
Cultura de la Comunidad de Madrid (Programa de Grupos Estratégicos) and by the Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología (grant no.
BIO2000– 0938).
Peer reviewed