TY - THES A1 - Dreyer, Ingo T1 - Biophysikalische und molekulare Grundlagen der Regulation des Kaliumtransports in Pflanzen T1 - Biophysical and molecular bases of the regulation of potassium transport in plants N2 - Kaliumionen (K+) sind die am häufigsten vorkommenden anorganischen Kationen in Pflanzen. Gemessen am Trockengewicht kann ihr Anteil bis zu 10% ausmachen. Kaliumionen übernehmen wichtige Funktionen in verschiedenen Prozessen in der Pflanze. So sind sie z.B. essentiell für das Wachstum und für den Stoffwechsel. Viele wichtige Enzyme arbeiten optimal bei einer K+ Konzentration im Bereich von 100 mM. Aus diesem Grund halten Pflanzenzellen in ihren Kompartimenten, die am Stoffwechsel beteiligt sind, eine kontrollierte Kaliumkonzentration von etwa 100 mM aufrecht. Die Aufnahme von Kaliumionen aus dem Erdreich und deren Transport innerhalb der Pflanze und innerhalb einer Pflanzenzelle wird durch verschiedene Kaliumtransportproteine ermöglicht. Die Aufrechterhaltung einer stabilen K+ Konzentration ist jedoch nur möglich, wenn die Aktivität dieser Transportproteine einer strikten Kontrolle unterliegt. Die Prozesse, die die Transportproteine regulieren, sind bis heute nur ansatzweise verstanden. Detailliertere Kenntnisse auf diesem Gebiet sind aber von zentraler Bedeutung für das Verständnis der Integration der Transportproteine in das komplexe System des pflanzlichen Organismus. In dieser Habilitationsschrift werden eigene Publikationen zusammenfassend dargestellt, in denen die Untersuchungen verschiedener Regulationsmechanismen pflanzlicher Kaliumkanäle beschrieben werden. Diese Untersuchungen umfassen ein Spektrum aus verschiedenen proteinbiochemischen, biophysikalischen und pflanzenphysiologischen Analysen. Um die Regulationsmechanismen grundlegend zu verstehen, werden zum einen ihre strukturellen und molekularen Besonderheiten untersucht. Zum anderen werden die biophysikalischen und reaktionskinetischen Zusammenhänge der Regulationsmechanismen analysiert. Die gewonnenen Erkenntnisse erlauben eine neue, detailliertere Interpretation der physiologischen Rolle der Kaliumtransportproteine in der Pflanze. N2 - Potassium ions (K+) are the most abundant anorganic cations in plants. They can constitute up to 10% of the plant dry weight. Potassium ions play important roles in different processes in the plant. For example, they are essential for growth and for metabolism. Many important enzymes work optimally at a K+ concentration within the range of about 100 mM. Therefore, plant cells maintain a controlled potassium concentration of approximately 100 mM in their compartments, which are involved in metabolism. The uptake of potassium ions from the soil and their transport within the plant and within a plant cell is accomplished by different potassium transporter proteins. However, the maintenance of a stable K+ concentration is only possible if the activity of these transporter proteins is subject to strict control. Up today the processes regulating the transporter proteins are only rudimentarily understood. More detailed knowledge in this area is, however, of central importance for the understanding of the integration of the transporter proteins into the complex system of the plant organism. This Habilitation-thesis summarizes own publications, in which the investigations of different regulation mechanisms of plant potassium channels are described. These investigations cover a spectrum of different protein-biochemical, biophysical and plant-physiological analyses. In order to understand the regulation mechanisms, on the one hand their structural and molecular characteristics are examined. On the other hand the biophysical and reaction-kinetic properties of the regulation mechanisms are analyzed. The obtained insights allow a new, more detailed view on the physiological role of potassium transporter proteins in the plant. KW - Kaliumion KW - Ionenkanal KW - Elektrophysiologie KW - Biophysik KW - Schmalwand KW - potassium ions KW - ion channel KW - electrophysiology KW - biophysics KW - Arabidopsis Y1 - 2005 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-7708 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rocchetti, Alessandra A1 - Sharma, Tripti A1 - Wulfetange, Camilla A1 - Scholz-Starke, Joachim A1 - Grippa, Alexandra A1 - Carpaneto, Armando A1 - Dreyer, Ingo A1 - Vitale, Alessandro A1 - Czempinski, Katrin A1 - Pedrazzini, Emanuela T1 - The putative K+ channel subunit AtKCO3 forms stable dimers in arabidopsis JF - Frontiers in plant science N2 - The permeation pore of K+ channels is formed by four copies of the pore domain. AtKCO3 is the only putative voltage-independent K+ channel subunit of Arabidopsis thaliana with a single pore domain. KCO3-like proteins recently emerged in evolution and, to date, have been found only in the genus Arabidopsis (A. thaliana and A. lyrata). We show that the absence of KCO3 does not cause marked changes in growth under various conditions. Only under osmotic stress we observed reduced root growth of the kco3-1 null-allele line. This phenotype was complemented by expressing a KCO3 mutant with an inactive pore, indicating that the function of KCO3 under osmotic stress does not depend on its direct ability to transport ions. Constitutively overexpressed AtKCO3 or AtKCO3::G FP are efficiently sorted to the tonoplast indicating that the protein is approved by the endoplasmic reticulum quality control. However, vacuoles isolated from transgenic plants do not have significant alterations in current density. Consistently, both AtKCO3 and AtKCO3::GFP are detected as homodimers upon velocity gradient centrifugation, an assembly state that would not allow for activity. We conclude that if AtKCO3 ever functions as a K+ channel, active tetramers are held by particularly weak interactions, are formed only in unknown specific conditions and may require partner proteins. KW - Arabidopsis KW - membrane proteins KW - potassium channels KW - protein assembly KW - tonoplast Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2012.00251 SN - 1664-462X VL - 3 PB - Frontiers Research Foundation CY - Lausanne ER -