Rapid transporter regulation prevents substrate flow traffic jams in boron transport

2017
Every multicellular organism, including all plants and animals, faces the challenge of taking up the nutrients it needs and distributing them throughout its body. Plants absorb many nutrients including nitrogen and boronfrom the soil into their roots, often using tightly controlled processes that require energy to work. Plant roots contain several distinct layers of cells and the nutrients need to cross these layers to reach a channel at the centre of the root known as the xylem, which transports the nutrients to other parts of the plant. Plants need boronto grow. However, high levels of this nutrient are toxic so plants have evolved to change the rate at which they absorb boronto optimize growth in different environments. When there is little boronin the soil, certain transporter proteinsmove to the surface of root cells to bring boroninto the root more effectively. On the other hand, when plants grow in soils with high boron, their root cells have fewer of these transporters on their surfaces to prevent too much boronentering the plant. This regulation of boronuptake appears logical, except for one detail: at any given location, the amount of boronin the soil is relatively stable and changes only very slowly. Why do plants invest energy in responding rapidly to the supply of a nutrient that changes so slowly in nature? Sotta et al. used mathematics and experimental approaches to study boronuptake in a plant known as Arabidopsis. The work reveals that the plants ability to rapidly alter how efficiently boronmoves into root cells actually serves to avoid internal “traffic jams” in borontransport. If the numbers of transporter proteinson the surface of root cells changed more slowly, individual cells would occasionally experience high levels of boronthat would interfere with the movement of boronfurther into the root, causing a jam. Furthermore, these ‘peaks’ of boroncould damage the individual cells they affect. The findings of Sotta et al. reveal that, by being able to rapidly change the numbers of certain transporter proteinson the surface of root cells, plants can ensure they receive a steady supply of boron. This work suggests that to develop artificial systems that can adapt to changing surroundings, researchers will need to engineer solutions like those found in plants in order to avoid similar traffic jams in the systems. Along with considering how plants interact with their environment, studying how they avoid internal traffic jams in nutrient uptake may help efforts to alter plants, including crops, so that they grow better in harsh environments.
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