AOBPreview originally published online on May 30, 2006
Annals of Botany 2006 98(1):1-8; doi:10.1093/aob/mcl099
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BOTANICAL BRIEFING |
Enigma Variations for Peptides and Their Transporters in Higher Plants
Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PT, UK
* For correspondence. E-mail cliff.bray{at}manchester.ac.uk
Received: 12 December 2005 Returned for revision: 22 February 2006 Accepted: 27 March 2006 Published electronically: 30 May 2006
Background. Two families of proteins that transport small peptides, the oligopeptide transporters (OPTs) and the peptide transporters (PTRs), have been recognized in eukaryotes. Higher plants contain a far greater number of genes for these transporters than do other eukaryotes. This may be indicative of the relative importance of (oligo)peptides and their transport to plant growth and metabolism.
Recent progress. Recent studies are now allowing us to assign functions to these transporters and are starting to identify their in-planta substrates, revealing unexpected and important contributions of the transporters to plant growth and developmental processes. This Botanical Briefing appraises recent findings that PTRs and OPTs have key roles to play in the control of plant cell growth and development. Evidence is presented that some of these transporters have functions outside that of nitrogen nutrition and that these carriers can also surprise us with their totally unexpected choice of substrates.
Key words: Transport, peptides, PTR, OPT, nitrogen reallocation, Arabidopsis, cereal, Hordeum vulgare
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