SOS3 function in plant salt tolerance requires N-myristoylation
and calcium binding.
Ishitani M, Liu J, Halfter U, Kim CS, Shi W, Zhu JK.
Department of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA.
The salt tolerance gene SOS3 (for salt overly sensitive3) of Arabidopsis is
predicted to encode a calcium binding protein with an N-myristoylation signature
sequence. Here, we examine the myristoylation and calcium binding properties of
SOS3 and their functional significance in plant tolerance to salt. Treatment of
young Arabidopsis seedlings with the myristoylation inhibitor 2-hydroxymyristic
acid caused the swelling of root tips, mimicking the phenotype of the
salt-hypersensitive mutant sos3-1. In vitro translation assays with reticulocyte
showed that the SOS3 protein was myristoylated. Targeted mutagenesis of the
N-terminal glycine-2 to alanine prevented the myristoylation of SOS3. The
functional significance of SOS3 myristoylation was examined by expressing the
wild-type myristoylated SOS3 and the mutated nonmyristoylated SOS3 in the sos3-1
mutant. Expression of the myristoylated but not the nonmyristoylated SOS3
complemented the salt-hypersensitive phenotype of sos3-1 plants. No significant
difference in membrane association was observed between the myristoylated and
nonmyristoylated SOS3. Gel mobility shift and (45)Ca(2)+ overlay assays
demonstrated that SOS3 is a unique calcium binding protein and that the sos3-1
mutation substantially reduced the capacity of SOS3 to bind calcium. The
resulting mutant SOS3 protein was not able to interact with the SOS2 protein
kinase and was less capable of activating it. Together, these results strongly
suggest that both N-myristoylation and calcium binding are required for SOS3
function in plant salt tolerance.