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Isolation and functional characterization of CsLsi1 , a silicon transporter gene in Cucumis sativus
Author(s) -
Sun Hao,
Guo Jia,
Duan Yaoke,
Zhang Tiantian,
Huo Heqiang,
Gong Haijun
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
physiologia plantarum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.351
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1399-3054
pISSN - 0031-9317
DOI - 10.1111/ppl.12515
Subject(s) - cucumis , cucurbita moschata , endodermis , gene expression , biology , aquaporin , heterologous expression , cucurbita , botany , protoplast , mutant , gene , transporter , oryza sativa , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , medicine , recombinant dna , alternative medicine , pathology
Cucumber ( Cucumis sativus ) is a widely grown cucurbitaceous vegetable that exhibits a relatively high capacity for silicon (Si) accumulation, but the molecular mechanism for silicon uptake remains to be clarified. Here we isolated and characterized CsLsi1 , a gene encoding a silicon transporter in cucumber (cv. Mch‐4). CsLsi1 shares 55.70 and 90.63% homology with the Lsi1s of a monocot and dicot, rice ( Oryza sativa ) and pumpkin ( Cucurbita moschata ), respectively. CsLsi1 was predominantly expressed in the roots, and application of exogenous silicon suppressed its expression. Transient expression in cucumber protoplasts showed that CsLsi1 was localized in the plasma membrane. Heterologous expression in Xenopus laevis oocytes showed that CsLsi1 evidenced influx transport activity for silicon but not urea or glycerol. Expression of cucumber CsLsi1‐mGFP under its own promoter showed that CsLsi1 was localized at the distal side of the endodermis and the cortical cells in the root tips as well as in the root hairs near the root tips. Heterologous expression of CsLsi1 in a rice mutant defective in silicon uptake and the over‐expression of this gene in cucumber further confirmed the role of CsLsi1 in silicon uptake. Our results suggest that CsLsi1 is a silicon influx transporter in cucumber. The cellular localization of CsLsi1 in cucumber roots is different from that in other plants, implying the possible effect of transporter localization on silicon uptake capability.

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