APA
Castro Rodríguez, Rosario & Escudero, Viviana & Reguera, María & Gil Díez, Patricia & Quintana, Julia & Isabel Prieto, Rosa & Kumar, Rakesh K. & Brear, Ella & Grillet, Louis & Wen, Jiangqi & Mysore, Kirankumar S. & Walker, Elsbeth L. & Smith, Penelope M. C. & Imperial, Juan & González Guerrero, Manuel .Medicago truncatula Yellow Stripe-Like7 encodes a peptide transporter participating in symbiotic nitrogen fixation.
ISO 690
Castro Rodríguez, Rosario & Escudero, Viviana & Reguera, María & Gil Díez, Patricia & Quintana, Julia & Isabel Prieto, Rosa & Kumar, Rakesh K. & Brear, Ella & Grillet, Louis & Wen, Jiangqi & Mysore, Kirankumar S. & Walker, Elsbeth L. & Smith, Penelope M. C. & Imperial, Juan & González Guerrero, Manuel. Medicago truncatula Yellow Stripe-Like7 encodes a peptide transporter participating in symbiotic nitrogen fixation.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/44980
Resumen:
Yellow Stripe-Like (YSL) proteins are a family of plant transporters that are typically
involved in transition metal homeostasis. Three of the four YSL clades (I, II and IV)
transport metals complexed with the non-proteinogenic amino acid nicotianamine or
its derivatives. No such capability has been shown for any member of clade III, but
the link between these YSLs and metal homeostasis could be masked by functional
redundancy. We studied the role of the clade III YSL protein MtSYL7 in Medicago
truncatula nodules. MtYSL7, which encodes a plasma membrane-bound protein, is
mainly expressed in the pericycle and cortex cells of the root nodules. Yeast comple mentation assays revealed that MtSYL7 can transport short peptides. M. truncatula
transposon insertion mutants with decreased expression of MtYSL7 had lower nitro gen fixation rates and showed reduced plant growth whether grown in symbiosis
with rhizobia or not. YSL7 mutants accumulated more copper and iron in the nodules,
which is likely to result from the increased expression of iron uptake and delivery
genes in roots. Taken together, these data suggest that MtYSL7 plays an important
role in the transition metal homeostasis of nodules and symbiotic nitrogen fixation.
KEYWORDS
Medicago truncatula, peptide transport, symbiotic nitrogen fixation, YS