Polyamines control of cation transport across plant membranes: implications for ion homeostasis and abiotic stress signaling

Polyamines are unique polycationic metabolites, controlling a variety of vital functions in plants, including growth and stress responses. Over the last two decades a bulk of data was accumulated providing explicit evidence that polyamines play an essential role in regulating plant membrane transpor...

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Published inFrontiers in plant science Vol. 5; p. 154
Main Authors Pottosin, Igor, Shabala, Sergey
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 23.04.2014
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Summary:Polyamines are unique polycationic metabolites, controlling a variety of vital functions in plants, including growth and stress responses. Over the last two decades a bulk of data was accumulated providing explicit evidence that polyamines play an essential role in regulating plant membrane transport. The most straightforward example is a blockage of the two major vacuolar cation channels, namely slow (SV) and fast (FV) activating ones, by the micromolar concentrations of polyamines. This effect is direct and fully reversible, with a potency descending in a sequence Spm(4+) > Spd(3+) > Put(2+). On the contrary, effects of polyamines on the plasma membrane (PM) cation and K(+)-selective channels are hardly dependent on polyamine species, display a relatively low affinity, and are likely to be indirect. Polyamines also affect vacuolar and PM H(+) pumps and Ca(2+) pump of the PM. On the other hand, catabolization of polyamines generates H2O2 and other reactive oxygen species (ROS), including hydroxyl radicals. Export of polyamines to the apoplast and their oxidation there by available amine oxidases results in the induction of a novel ion conductance and confers Ca(2+) influx across the PM. This mechanism, initially established for plant responses to pathogen attack (including a hypersensitive response), has been recently shown to mediate plant responses to a variety of abiotic stresses. In this review we summarize the effects of polyamines and their catabolites on cation transport in plants and discuss the implications of these effects for ion homeostasis, signaling, and plant adaptive responses to environment.
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Edited by: Antonio F. Tiburcio, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain
Reviewed by: Taku Takahashi, Okayama University, Japan; Paul F. Morris, Biological Sciences Bowling Green State University, USA
This article was submitted to Plant Metabolism and Chemodiversity, a section of the journal Frontiers in Plant Science.
ISSN:1664-462X
1664-462X
DOI:10.3389/fpls.2014.00154