Protein Information

ID 724
Name sulfate transporters
Synonyms EDM 4; SAT1; EDM4; SAT 1; SLC26A1; Solute carrier family 26 member 1; Sulfate anion tranporter AT1; Sulfate anion transporter 1…

Compound Information

ID 309
Name sulfur
CAS sulfur

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
20022138 Shahbaz M, Tseng MH, Stuiver CE, Koralewska A, Posthumus FS, Venema JH, Parmar S, Schat H, Hawkesford MJ, De Kok LJ: Copper exposure interferes with the regulation of the uptake, distribution and metabolism of sulfate in Chinese cabbage. J Plant Physiol. 2010 Apr 15;167(6):438-46. Epub 2010 Jan 21.
Exposure of Chinese cabbage (Brassica pekinensis) to enhanced Cu (2+) concentrations (1-10 microM) resulted in leaf chlorosis, a loss of photosynthetic capacity and lower biomass production at > or = 5 microM. The decrease in pigment content was likely not the consequence of degradation, but due to hindered chloroplast development upon Cu exposure. The Cu content of the root increased with the Cu (2+) concentration (up to 40-fold), though only a minor proportion (4%) was transferred to the shoot. The nitrate uptake by the root was substantially reduced at > or = 5 microM Cu (2+). The nitrogen content of the root was affected little at lower Cu (2+) levels, whereas that in the shoot was decreased at > or = 5 microM Cu (2+). Cu affected the uptake, distribution and metabolism of sulfate in Chinese cabbage. The total sulfur content of the shoot was increased at > or = 2 microM Cu (2+), which could be attributed mainly to an increase in sulfate content. Moreover, there was a strong increase in water-soluble non-protein thiol content in the root and, to a lesser extent, in the shoot at > or = 1 microM, which could only partially be ascribed to a Cu-induced enhancement of the phytochelatin content. The nitrate uptake by the root was substantially reduced at > or = 5 microM Cu (2+), coinciding with a decrease in biomass production. However, the activity of the sulfate transporters in the root was slightly enhanced at 2 and 5 microM Cu (2+), accompanied by enhanced expression of the Group 1 high affinity transporter Sultr1;2, and the Group 4 transporters Sultr4;1 and Sultr4;2. In the shoot, there was an induction of expression of Sultr4;2 at 5 and 10 microM Cu (2+). The expression of APS reductase was affected little in the root and shoot up to 10 microM Cu (2+). The upregulation of the sulfate transporters may be due not only to greater sulfur demand at higher Cu levels, but also the consequence of interference by Cu with the signal transduction pathway regulating the expression and activity of the sulfate transporters.
1(0,0,0,1)