Mapping fungal ion channel locations |
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Authors: | RR Lew |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biology, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario, M3J 1P3, Canada. |
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Abstract: | Ion channel mapping techniques are described and the results for two fungal organisms, Saprolegnia ferax and Neurospora crassa, are presented. In these species, two channel types have been characterized, stretch-activated channels exhibiting significant calcium permeability and spontaneous channels having significant potassium permeability. Two distinct analyses of patch clamp data, analysis of channel self-clustering and association between different channel types, and localization along the hyphae, reveal significant differences between the two organisms. S. ferax maintains a tip-high gradient of both channel types which is lost after disruption of the actin cytoskeleton. There is significant self-clustering of the channels, as well as interactions between channel types. N. crassa on the other hand does not maintain tip-high gradients, and clustered distributions are observed only for the stretch-activated channels. In terms of physiological roles, evidence is quite strong that the stretch-activated channels function as a growth sensor in S. ferax, but have an unknown function in N. crassa. In both organisms, the potassium permeable channels presumably function in potassium uptake. The differences between these two organisms may be due, in part, to differences in their normal environment: aquatic versus terrestrial. Copyright 1998 Academic Press. |
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