Plant Physiol. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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Plant Physiology 73:208-215 (1983)
© 1983 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Potassium Transport in Corn Roots 1

II. The Significance of the Root Periphery

Leon V. Kochian and William J. Lucas

Department of Botany, University of California, Davis, California 95616

The relative transport capabilities of the cells of the root periphery and cortex were investigated using a variety of experimental techniques. Brief (30 seconds to 1 minute) exposures with the penetrating sulfhydryl reagent, N-ethyl maleimide (NEM), and the impermeant reagent, p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonic acid (PCMBS), dramatically reduced 86Rb+ (0.2 millimolar RbCl) uptake into 2 centimeter corn (Zea mays [A632 x (C3640 x Oh43)]) root segments. Autoradiographic localization studies with [3H]NEM and [203Hg]PCMBS demonstrated that, during short term exposures with either reagent, sulfhydryl binding occurred almost exclusively in the cells of the root periphery.

Corn root cortical protoplasts were isolated, and exhibited significant K+(86Rb+) influx. The kinetics for K+ uptake were studied; the influx isotherms were smooth, nonsaturating curves that approached linearity at higher K+(Rb+) concentrations (above 1 millimolar K+). These kinetics were identical in shape to the complex kinetics previously observed for K+ uptake in corn roots (Kochian, Lucas 1982 Plant Physiol 70: 1723-1731), and could be resolved into a saturable and a first order kinetic component.

The existence of a hypodermal apoplastic barrier was investigated. The apoplastic, cell wall binding dye, Calcofluor White M2R, appeared to be excluded from the cortex by the hypodermis. However, experiments with damaged roots indicated that this result may be an artifact resulting from the binding of dye to the epidermal cell walls. Furthermore, [203Hg] PCMBS autoradiography demonstrated that the hypodermis was not a barrier to apoplastic movement of PCMBS.

These results suggest that although cortical cells possess the capacity to absorb ions, K+ influx at low concentrations is limited to the root periphery. Cortical cell uptake appears to be repressed under these conditions. At higher concentrations, cortical cells may function to absorb K+. Such a model may involve regulation of cortical cell ion transport capacity.


1 Supported by National Science Foundation Grant PCM 8117721 to W. J. L. and by a National Science Foundation predoctoral fellowship and a Jastro-Shields Research Award to L. V. K.




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