Arabidopsis ammonium transporters, atAMT1;1 and atAMT1;2, have different biochemical properties and functional roles

Megan C. Shelden, Bei Dong, Guy L. De Bruxelles, Ben Trevaskis, Jim Whelan, Peter R. Ryan, Susan M. Howitt, Michael K. Udvardi*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    68 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    We have compared the biochemical properties of two different Arabidopsis ammonium transporters, AtAMT1;1 and AtAMT1;2, expressed in yeast, with the biophysical properties of ammonium transport in planta. Expression of the AtAMT1;1 gene in Arabidopsis roots increased approximately four-fold in response to nitrogen deprivation. This coincided with a similar increase in high-affinity ammonium uptake by these plants. The biophysical characteristics of this high-affinity system (Km for ammonium and methylammonium of 8 μM and 31 μM, respectively) matched those of AtAMT1;1 expressed in yeast (Km for methylammonium of 32 μM and Ki for ammonium of 1-10 μM). The same transport system was present, although less active, in nitrate-fed roots. Ammonium-fed plants exhibited the lowest rates of ammonium uptake and appeared to deploy a different transporter (Km for ammonium of 46 μM). Expression of AtAMT1;2 in roots was insensitive to changes in nitrogen nutrition. In contrast to AtAMT1;1, AtAMT1;2 expressed in yeast exhibited biphasic kinetics for methylammonium uptake: In addition to a high-affinity phase with a Km of 36 μM, a low-affinity phase with a Km for methylammonium of 3.0 mM was measured. Despite the presence of a putative chloroplast transit peptide in AtAMT1;2, the protein was not imported into chloroplasts in vitro. The electrophysiological data for roots, together with the biochemical properties of AtAMT1;1 and Northern blot analysis indicate a pre-eminent role for AtAMT1;1 in ammonium uptake across the plasma membrane of nitrate-fed and nitrogen-deprived root cells.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)151-160
    Number of pages10
    JournalPlant and Soil
    Volume231
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2001

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