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1.
The uptake of chlortetracycline (CTC) and the nature of the fluorescence of CTC was studied in intact human erythrocytes from apparently healthy donors. The uptake of CTC at 22 degrees C proceeded with a t1/2 of about 3 min, and after 15 min a stable equilibrium was achieved with an intracellular accumulation by a factor of 5-6 relative to the medium concentration. The accumulation did not change in the range of CTC concentrations tested (20-500 microM). The Ca specificity of the CTC fluorescence spectrum was confirmed by Ca depletion of red cells using A23187 in the presence of EGTA and 0.2 mM Mg. This procedure decreased the total intracellular calcium content by about 70% and reduced the fluorescence intensity to one-fourth. Fluorescence microscopy of red cells incubated with 100 microM CTC at 22 degrees C showed that the fluorescence originated mainly from the red cell membrane. In addition, in about 15% of erythrocytes one or more fluorescent dots (diameter greater than 0.2 less than 1 microns) were detected. The fluorescence of the dots and membranes was related to calcium, as evidenced by the reduction of their intensity in Ca depleted cells. The number of erythrocytes with fluorescent dots and the frequency of the dots per cell was largely unaffected by lowering the incubation temperature to 0 degrees C, indicating that the dots most probably do not represent endocytotic artifacts induced by CTC. The number of dots was increased in erythrocytes preincubated with primaquine, demonstrating that CTC fluorescence can be applied to monitor the appearance of intracellular Ca storing vesicles. It is concluded that in (at least) 15% of erythrocytes obtained from apparently healthy donors intracellular vesicles containing Ca can be detected by CTC fluorescence microscopy.  相似文献   

2.
Subcellular distribution of the divalent cation-sensitive probe chlorotetracycline (CTC) was observed by fluorescence microscopy in isolated pancreatic acinar cells, dissociated hepatocytes, rod photoreceptors, and erythrocytes. In each cell type, areas containing membranes fluoresced intensely while areas containing no membranes (nuclei and zymogen granules) were not fluorescent. Cell compartments packed with rough endoplasmic reticulum or Golgi vesicles (acinar cells) or plasma membrane-derived membranes (rod outer segments) exhibited a uniform fluorescence. In contrast, cell compartments having large numbers of mitochondria (hepatocytes and the rod inner segment) exhibited a punctate fluorescence. Punctate fluorescence was prominent in the perinuclear and peri-granular areas of isolated acinar cells during CTC efflux, suggesting that under these conditions mitochondrial fluorescence may account for a large portion of acinar cell fluorescence. Fluorometry of dissociated pancreatic acini, preloaded with CTC, showed that application of the mitochondrial inhibitors antimycin A, NaCN, rotenone, or C1CCP, or of the divalent cation ionophore A23187 (all agents known to release mitochondrial calcium) rapidly decreased the fluorescence of acini. In the case of mitochondrial inhibitors, this response could be elicited before but not following the loss of CTC fluorescence induced by bethanechol stimulation. Removal of extracellular Ca2+ and Mg2+ or addition of EDTA also decreased fluorescence but did not prevent secretagogues or mitochondrial inhibitors from eliciting a further response. These data suggest that bethanechol acts to decrease CTC fluorescence at the same intracellular site as do mitochondrial inhibitors. This could be due to release of calcium from either mitochondria or another organelle that requires ATP to sequester calcium.  相似文献   

3.
The subcellular localization of calcium in cells of symbiotic partners located within leaf cavities of Azolla was investigated by using chlorotetracycline, ESI and EELS analysis. Loosely membrane-bound calcium was evidenced by using CTC or EGTA and CTC, in cytoplasmic regions of Azolla hair cells and in cytoplasm of the cyanobiont. Tightly membrane-bound calcium revealed by CTC, and ESI and EELS analysis, was observed in cyanophycin granules and carboxysomes of the cyanobiont. A third calcium type, revealed by ESI and EELS analysis, was localized at the level of cell walls of simple and branched Azolla hairs, in the envelope of heterocysts, and in the cell walls of the cyanobiont.  相似文献   

4.
Human neutrophils labeled with chlortetracycline (CTC), commonly used as a probe of membrane-bound calcium, release lysosomal enzymes and exhibit a rapid decrease in fluorescence when exposed to the chemotactic peptide fMet-Leu-Phe or the lectin Con A. This decrease has been attributed to the release of calcium from a membrane-associated "trigger pool." The nature of this putative pool has been further characterized by examining the effects of various inhibitors on the CTC fluorescence response and lysosomal enzyme release from stimulated neutrophils. These agents included inhibitors of glycolysis (2-deoxyglucose and iodoacetate), an uncoupler of oxidative- phosphorylation (KCN), and a sulfhydryl inhibitor (N-ethylmaleimide). Resting neutrophils labelled with CTC demonstrated an enhanced decay of baseline fluorescence when exposed to 2-deoxyglucose or iodoacetate. This suggested that the pool of membrane-bound calcium labelled by this probe was maintained by glycolytic metabolism. Furthermore, 2-deoxyglucose and iodoacetate inhibited both the stimulated decrease in CTC fluorescence and lysosomal enzyme release induced by fMet-Leu-Phe and Con A in a time-dependent manner. KCN did not inhibit either response to stimulation, but did retard the recovery of CTC fluorescence observed when fMet-Leu-Phe was used as the stimulus. High concentrations of N-ethylmaleimide (100 microM) completely inhibited both the CTC fluorescence response and lysosomal enzyme release almost immediately; low concentrations of N-ethylmaleimide (30 microM) inhibited lysosomal enzyme release in a time-dependent manner without significantly affecting changes in CTC fluorescence. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that CTC serves as a probe of membrane-bound "trigger" calcium, the release of which is dependent upon intact glycolysis and is a requirement for lysosomal enzyme release.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract– The fluorescent divalent metal chelate-probe, chlorotetracycline (CTC), was used as a dynamic monitor of calcium association with rat brain snynaptosomes. The determined fluorescence excitation and emission maxima, 412 nm and 522 nm respectively, were used to monitor membrane-calcium interactions as a function of various parameters. Positive correlations were observed between increased or decreased fluorescence quantum yield and the uptake of both CTC and 45Ca by synpatosomes. The divalent metal ionophore A23187 enhanced fluorescence as well as probe and 45Ca uptake. Whereas, the polar chelator, EGTA, markedly reduced fluorescence, and the synaptosomal bound CTC and 45Ca. The CTC fluorescence changes also demonstrated the saturable manner in which 45Ca bound synaptosomes. At concentrations greater than 100μg/ml, CTC bound to the synaptosomes in a manner which quenched fluorescence at 522 nm. Also, CTC, at concentrations above 15 μg/ml, enhanced the uptake of 45Ca. At CTC concentrations between 10 and 15 μg/ml the quenching and iono-phoretic properties of the probe were minimized without affecting the capability of using the probe to visualize calcium interactions with synaptosomal membranes. Also, at a low CTC concentration (12.5 μg/ml) the inhibition of calcium uptake by increasing monovalent ion concentrations was clearly demonstrated.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The distribution of membrane calcium and calmodulin (CaM) has been fluorimetrically determined in the anther of Gasteria verrucosa with particular attention to sporogenous cells, meiocytes, microspores, pollen and stages of pollen germination and tube growth using chlortetracycline (CTC) and fluphenazine (FPZ). CTC and FPZ fluorescence in sporogenous cells is relatively higher than in the adjacent tapetal cells, indicating higher membrane calcium and CaM levels in the former cell type. However, during meiosis there is a significant increase in membrane calcium and CaM levels in the meiocytes compared to that found in the young microspores. CTC and FPZ fluorescence in the sporogenous cells, meiocytes and young microspores is punctate and slightly diffused throughout the cytoplasm. In the microspores of the tetrad and the young released microspores CTC fluorescence (CTCf) is polarized and mainly associated with the area opposite the future colporal region. FPZ fluorescence (FPZf) becomes polarized in the young microspore. Subsequently, there is a shift in the polarity, and most of the CTCf and FPZf in the old microspores and pollen is regionalized towards the colporal region, and the fluorescence is more diffused, indicating a change in the organellar-bound calcium and CaM. This final graded distribution of CTCf is maintained during pollen germination in that the growing pollen tubes invariably show a tip to base membrane-calcium gradient. In the tapetal cells a high level of Ca2+ is present during the microspore stage. During the preparation for anthesis the endothecium differentiation is marked by the presence of Ca2+. Post-treatment of labelled cells with a Ca2+ chelator such as EGTA resulted in a substantial decrease in diffuse and punctate CTCf. Alternatively, treatment of cells with non-ionic detergent Nonidet P-40 resulted in the total elimination of CTCf, suggesting that the observed CTC fluorescence was due to membrane-associated calcium. The cytological specification of CTC as a probe for calcium is discussed. From cytofluorometric measurements and atomic absorption, it became clear that the level of Ca2+ in the anther is high during the sporogenous and meiotic phases. An increase in CTCf and FPZf occurred after microspore mitosis. An interaction of Ca2+ transport from tapetum to the young pollen is postulated. These findings suggest that the level of Ca2+ in the anther during meiosis is generally relatively higher than at the sporogenous or young microspore stage. These findings are discussed in the light of available information on the role of Ca2+ and CaM-mediated processes such as cell division, callose synthesis and pollen-tube tip growth.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Using the fluorescent calcium probe Quin-2, we could demonstrate a tip-to-base gradient of free calcium within growing pollen tubes ofLilium longiflorum. This result shows that it is possible to visualize calcium ions using Quin-2 in plant cells which are surrounded by a cell wall and that the calcium gradients demonstrated by CTC fluorescence (indicating membrane-bound calcium) and PIXE (showing total calcium) is paralleled by a gradient of free calcium in pollen tubes.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the changes in membrane-associated calcium that occur during cytokinin induced bud formation in Funaria hygrometrica Hedw. using the fluorescent Ca2+-chelate probe chlorotetracycline (CTC). In the target caulonema cells a localization of CTC fluorescent material becomes evident at the presumptive bud site 12 h after cytokinin treatment. By the time of the initial asymmetric division this region is four times as fluorescent as the entire caulonema cell. Bright CTC fluorescence remains localized in the dividing cells of the bud. To relate the changes in CTC fluorescence to changes in Ca2+ as opposed to membrane-density changes we employed the general membrane marker N-phenyl-1-naphthylamine (NPN). NPN fluorescence increases only 1.5 times in the initial bud cell. We conclude that the relative amount of Ca2+ per quantity of membrane increases in this localized area and is maintained throughout bud formation. We suggest that these increases in membrane-associated Ca2+ indicate a localized rise in intracellular free Ca2+ concentration brought about by cytokinin action.Abbreviations BA 6-benzyladenine - CTC chlorotetracycline - ER endoplasmic reticulum - NPN N-phenyl-1-naphthylamine  相似文献   

9.
Several observations indicate that the triggering event for receptor-mediated actin polymerization takes place in or close to the plasma membrane. Stimulation of human neutrophils with the chemotactic peptide formylmethionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMet-Leu-Phe) causes rapid and transient changes in both chlorotetracycline (CTC) fluorescence and the cellular content of filamentous actin (F-actin), thus suggesting a regulatory role for membrane-bound calcium in actin polymerization. In the present study, tetracaine, a proposed antagonist to membrane-bound calcium, totally inhibited the rebinding of the membrane calcium released by fMet-Leu-Phe. This was accompanied by a magnified and sustained increase in the cellular content of F-actin. In agreement, N-ethylmaleimide, an inhibitor of motile functions, completely abolished the fMet-Leu-Phe-triggered changes in both CTC fluorescence and F-actin content and rapidly reversed the responses when added after the peptide. The tumor promoter phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate, caused only small changes in CTC fluorescence and F-actin content, and reduced a subsequent fMet-Leu-Phe-induced CTC response and actin polymerization. Inhibition of the breakdown of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate, by calcium depletion, had no significant effects on the fMet-Leu-Phe-induced CTC response and alterations in F-actin content, whereas pretreatment with pertussis toxin totally inhibited both these responses. Consequently, the strong correlation between changes in CTC fluorescence and F-actin content, found in this study, suggests a triggering or modulating role of membrane-associated calcium on actin polymerization in human neutrophils.  相似文献   

10.
Pollen of Lilium longiflorum Thunb. was germinated for 12 h in growth medium containing 1·10-4 M chlorotetracycline (CTC), or growing tubes were treated with 1·10-4 M CTC for up to 2 h. These treatments have drastic effects: In the CTC-containing medium, out-growing tubes form only short tubes. Irregular wall thickenings are visible. Thirty minutes CTC-treatment cause growing tubes to bend and grow back toward the grain. Electron micrographs of CTC-treated tubes show that CTC affects the organelle distribution: The polar zonation of organelles is disturbed. Vesicle-and endoplasmic reticulum-accumulations are found in the wrong places, together with extensive wall thickenings and a very irregular plasma membrane. The structural details of most cell organelles look normal after CTC treatment, but the mitochondria possess unusual cristae, and microtubules are absent. The disoriented growth is interpreted as an effect of the ability of CTC to chelate intracellular calcium ions, to bind them to membranes, and thus to disturb the dynamics of the delicate Ca2+-equilibria thought to regulate oriented exocytosis.Abbreviations CTC chlorotetracycline - ER endoplasmic reticulum  相似文献   

11.
The method of non-enzymatic, manual microdissection was established to isolate zygotes and young embryos in Triticum aestivum L. The distribution of membrane-bound calcium and activated calmodulin in the isolated zygotes and young embryos was visualized by chlorotetracycline (CTC) and fluphenanize (FPZ) fluorescence probe respectively. The CTC fluorescence was polar distributed in the zygote protoplast. The distribution of the CFC and FPZ fluorescence from twocelled embryos to multicellular embryos was observed. In the young pear-shaped embryos the CTC and FPZ fluorescence of the embryos was slightly higher than that of the suspensor. In a pear-shaped embryo beginning with differentiation the CTC fluorescence was restricted to several-layer of cells between embryo and suspensor and the several ventral cells of the embryo. In the embryos with newly differentiated plumule the basal part of the embryo possessed a higher CTC fluorescence, while the FPZ fluorescence was only distributed in the basal part. It indicated that the distribution of CTC and FPZ fluorescence was in coincidence with the sites that plumule and radicle were beginning to differentiate. The technique of isolated zygotes and the possible function of calcium and calmodulin during embryo development are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Ionic calcium concentration was measured in the gonidial zone of fresh coralloid roots by means of calcium microelectrodes. It was 10−6 M in the apical segments of coralloid roots and increased to 10−5 M in the gonidial zones of median and basal segments. Loosely membrane-bound calcium was evidenced by using chlorotetracycline (CTC) or ethylene glycol-bis-(β-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) and CTC, in cell walls of columnar cells ofCycas and in the cytoplasm of cyanobiont. Sub-cellular localization of calcium was obtained by electron spectroscopic imaging (ESI) and electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) analyses applied at transmission electron microscopy on thin, unstained sections of gonidial zone of coralloid roots. By means of these techniques, bound-calcium was detected inside the mucilage of apical and median segments whereas, in the basal segments, it was completely absent. In the heterocysts of apical segments of coralloid, calcium was localized on the envelope, cell walls, thylakoids and cyanophycin granules. In the gonidial zone of the basal segments, dead or degenerating heterocysts completely lacked calcium. Therefore, the high ionic calcium amounts detected in the gonidial zone of median and basal segments could represent a minor calcium uptake by the cells or release by lysed ones. The decreases in nitrogenase activity recorded in the median and basal segments of the coralloid roots paralleled the decrease in calcium amount in heterocyst envelope.  相似文献   

13.
The antibiotic chlorotetracycline (CTC) is used as a fluorescent chelate probe to investigate its active transport in respiring Staphylococcus aureus cells. CTC chelation to magnesium or calcium leads to fluorescence enhancement. This enhancement is further increased when the polarity of its environment is decreased, as occurs when the complex moves from an aqueous environment into a membrane. Upon addition of CTC to a dispersion of S. aureus cells, a time dependent fluorescence enhancement is detected which is a monitor of the transport of the CTC-divalent cation complex into the membrane. This uptake has been shown to be energy dependent and exhibits saturation kinetics with an apparent Km of 107 ± 20 μM by the same technique. The initial rates of antibiotic uptake are shown to have a pH optimum between 5.5 and 6.5. The effects of exogenously added EDTA and paramagnetic Mn2+ indicate that the CTC-divalent cation complex is transported to the inside of the membrane. Exogenously added magnesium inhibits the accumulation process. This implies that the membrane CTC binding site involves a divalent cation sequestered away from the surface of the membrane, and only free CTC is bound to that site. The uptake of CTC is also temperature dependent with a maximal rate at 40°. Arrhenius plots of the initial fluorescence enhancement rates are found to be biphasic with a 27° transition temperature. The break in the plots presumably reflects an order-disorder transition involving the fatty acids of the cell membrane. Thus, transport of the CTC involves movement through the fatty acid region of the membrane. This movement is facilitated by the more fluid state of the membrane above the transition temperature.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Developing tracheary elements in suspension cultures ofZinnia elegans fluoresce intensely relative to non-differentiating cells when stained with chlorotetracycline (CTC), a fluorescent chelate probe for membrane associated calcium. This suggests that a change in calcium uptake or subcellular distribution accompanies the onset of tracheary element differentiation. A few cells in early differentiating cultures were brightly fluorescent, but did not have visible cell wall thickenings, suggesting that a rise in sequestered calcium may precede visible differentiation. Diffuse CTC fluorescence in early differentiation most likely results from sequestration of calcium in the endoplasmic reticulum. Late in differentiation, CTC fluorescence becomes punctate in appearance, probably due to loss of plasma membrane integrity occurring at the onset of autolysis.Zinnia suspension culture cells were found to be very sensitive to CTC and low concentrations (10 M) were used to assure accurate localization of membrane-associated calcium in healthy cells.Abbreviations CTC chlorotetracycline - DIC differential interference contrast - DiOC6 3,3-dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide - ER endoplasmic reticulum - EGTA ethylene glycol bis-(amino-ethyl ether) N,N,N1N1-tetraacetic acid - NPN n-phenylnaphthylamine - OsFeCN osmium tetroxide and potassium ferricyanide - TE tracheary element - TEM transmission electron microscopy  相似文献   

15.
Calcium dynamics in human neutrophils have been studied using Quin 2 fluorescence as a measure of free cytoplasmic calcium and chlortetracycline fluorescence as an indicator of membrane-bound calcium. The results show that 1) FMLP-induced increased cytoplasmic calcium likely comes from at least two different pools. Calcium is released from one only after a high affinity receptor interaction and from the second also after a lower affinity interaction. The initial increment in cytosolic calcium does not appear to originate in the pool(s) reflected by CTC fluorescence. 2) Cytochalasin B strikingly alters the FMLP effect on membrane associated calcium, inducing a marked “recovery” phase which could be a reflection of fusion of granule membranes with the plasma membrane. 3) PMA, at concentrations inducing extensive specific granule release (≤ 10 ng/ml) has no measurable direct effect on membrane-bound or cytosolic calcium. However, PMA inhibits a subsequent CTC fluorescence response to FMLP and following the ionophore, A23187, it induces a clear decrease in cytosolic calcium. These indirect effects may be explained in terms of PMA's activation of protein kinase C.  相似文献   

16.
Stimulus-secretion coupling in pancreatic exocrine cells was studied using dissociated acini, prepared from mouse pancreas, and chlorotetracycline (CTC), a fluorescent probe which forms highly fluorescent complexes with Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions bound to membranes. Acini, preloaded by incubation with CTC (100 microM), displayed a fluorescence having spectral properties like that of CTC complexed to calcium (excitation and emission maxima at 398 and 527 nm, respectively). Stimulation with either bethanechol or caerulein resulted in a rapid loss of fluorescence intensity and an increase in outflux of CTC from the acini. After 5 min of stimulation, acini fluorescence had been reduced by 40% and appeared to be that of CTC complexed to Mg2+ (excitation and emission maxima at 393 and 521 nm, respectively). The fluorescence loss induced by bethanechol was blocked by atropine and was seen at all agonist concentrations that elicited amylase release. Maximal fluorescence loss, however, required a bethanechol concentration three times greater than that needed for maximal amylase release. In contrast, acini preloaded with ANS or oxytetracycline, probes that are relatively insensitive to membrane-bound divalent cations, displayed no secretagogue-induced fluorescence changes. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that CTC is able to probe some set of intracellular membranes which release calcium during secretory stimulation and that this release results in dissociation of Ca(2+)-complexed CTC.  相似文献   

17.
In sea urchin eggs fertilization is accompanied by cortical granule exocytosis, a secretory event thought to be initiated by release of intracellularly sequestered calcium. We have examined the effect of two drugs on this process: chlortetracycline (CTC), a known chelator of intracellular calcium, and 8-(N,N-diethylamino)octyl-3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoate (TMB-8), an antagonist of intracellular calcium release in both skeletal and smooth muscle. Preincubation of eggs for 10 min with either CTC or TMB-8 blocked sperm entry, inhibited the burst of 45Ca2+ efflux normally seen postinsemination, and prevented fertilization envelope elevation. Half-maximal inhibition occurred with 200 microM CTC and 60 microM TMB-8. Electron microscopy confirmed that cortical granule exocytosis had been blocked, although inhibition was not due to a direct effect on exocytosis. CTC and TMB-8 had no effect on Ca2+-stimulated granule fusion in isolated egg cortices. Rather, these drugs block the early events in egg activation: sperm incorporation and triggering of exocytosis. These two effects appear to be independent since addition of either drug just before insemination permits sperm entry but inhibits calcium release and cortical granule exocytosis.  相似文献   

18.
During the first day of development, fertilized eggs of fucoid algae generate an embryonic axis and commence rhizoid growth at one pole. Using Fucus distichus (L.) Powell, F. vesiculosus L. and Pelvetia fastigiata (J.Ag.) DeTony we have investigated the role of calcium in axis formation and fixation as well as in tip growth. The intracellular distribution of membrane-associated calcium was visualized with the fluorescent calcium probe chlorotetracycline (CTC). Punctate fluorescence associated with organelle-like structures was found in conjunction with diffuse staining at all developmental stages. This membrane-associated calcium remained uniformly distributed throughout the cortical cytoplasm while the axis was established, but increased in the rhizoid protuberance at germination. In subsequent development, fluorescence was restricted to the cortical cytoplasm at the elongating tip and at sites of crosswall biosynthesis.The requirement for Ca2+ uptake during development was investigated through inhibition studies; influx was impaired with transport antagonists or by removal of extracellular calcium. Both treatments curtailed germination and tip elongation but had little effect on axis polarization. Reductions in external calcium that interfered with elongation also markedly reduced the apical CTC fluorescencence, indicating that calcium uptake and localization are prerequisites for tip growth. This apical Ca2+ is probably involved in the secretory process that sustains tip elongation. By contrast, calcium was not implicated in the generation of an embryonic axis.Abbreviations ASW artificial seawater - CTC chlorotetracycline - DU developmental unit - EGTA erhylene glycol bis(amino-ethyl ether) N,N,N1,N1–tetraacetic acid - NPN N-phenyl-1-napthylamine  相似文献   

19.
Andrzej Tretyn  Jan Kopcewicz 《Planta》1988,175(2):237-240
Calcium distribution was studied in oat caryopses. Using the chlorotetracycline method it was found that membrane-associated Ca2+ was present in the aleurone layer. X-ray microanalysis confirmed the presence of calcium in aleurone cells; it also demonstrated the presence of considerable amounts of calcium in the cell wall surrounding these cells.Abbreviation CTC chlorotetracycline  相似文献   

20.
Calcium has been implicated in various regulatory roles in plantcells including auxin-induced cell elongation. Treatment ofpea epicotyl segments with the calcium chelators, EGTA and chlorotetracycline(CTC), the calcium ionophore, A23187 [GenBank] , and channel blocker, D-600,inhibits auxin-induced cell elongation. Depletion of tissuecalcium either by EGTA or EGTA and a calcium ionophore doesnot interfere with the induction of the early auxin induciblemRNAs pIAA4/5 and pIAA6. Similarly, an increase in cytosoliccalcium with calcium and calcium ionophore neither induces thehormonally regulated mRNAs nor interferes with their inductionby auxin. The calcium channel blocker, D-600, is without effecton the auxin-regulated mRNA induction. The results indicatethat calcium is not involved in the rapid induction of IAA4/5and IAA6 genes in pea tissue. However, a possible role for calciumin the translation of these mRNAs, or in the expression of otherauxin-regulated genes, is not excluded. 3Present Address: Department of Biology, Tokyo MetropolitanUniversity, Tokyo, Japan. (Received April 8, 1988; Accepted July 30, 1988)  相似文献   

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