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1.
The stomatal complex of Zea mays is composed of two pore-forming guard cells and two adjacent subsidiary cells. For stomatal movement, potassium ions and anions are thought to shuttle between these two cell types. As potential cation transport pathways, K(+)-selective channels have already been identified and characterized in subsidiary cells and guard cells. However, so far the nature and regulation of anion channels in these cell types have remained unclear. In order to bridge this gap, we performed patch-clamp experiments with subsidiary cell and guard cell protoplasts. Voltage-independent anion channels were identified in both cell types which, surprisingly, exhibited different, cell-type specific dependencies on cytosolic Ca(2+) and pH. After impaling subsidiary cells of intact maize plants with microelectrodes and loading with BCECF [(2',7'-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5(and6)carboxyflurescein] as a fluorescent pH indicator, the regulation of ion channels by the cytosolic pH and the membrane voltage was further examined. Stomatal closure was found to be accompanied by an initial hyperpolarization and cytosolic acidification of subsidiary cells, while opposite responses were observed during stomatal opening. Our findings suggest that specific changes in membrane potential and cytosolic pH are likely to play a role in determining the direction and capacity of ion transport in subsidiary cells.  相似文献   

2.
An antiparallel-directed potassium transport between subsidiary cells and guard cells which form the graminean stomatal complex has been proposed to drive stomatal movements in maize. To gain insights into the coordinated shuttling of K(+) ions between these cell types during stomatal closure, the effect of ABA on the time-dependent K(+) uptake and K(+) release channels as well as on the instantaneously activating non-selective cation channels (MgC) was examined in subsidiary cells. Patch-clamp studies revealed that ABA did not affect the MgC channels but differentially regulated the time-dependent K(+) channels. ABA caused a pronounced rise in time-dependent outward-rectifying K(+) currents (K(out)) at alkaline pH and decreased inward-rectifying K(+) currents (K(in)) in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. Our results show that the ABA-induced changes in time-dependent K(in) and K(out) currents from subsidiary cells are very similar to those previously described for guard cells. Thus, the direction of K(+) transport in subsidiary cells and guard cells during ABA-induced closure does not seem to be grounded solely on the cell type-specific ABA regulation of K(+) channels.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Voltage-dependent inward-rectifying (K(in)) and outward-rectifying (K(out)) K(+) channels are capable of mediating K(+) fluxes across the plasma membrane. Previous studies on guard cells or heterologously expressed K(+) channels provided evidence for the requirement of ATP to maintain K(+) channel activity. Here, the nucleotide and Mg(2+) dependencies of time-dependent K(in) and K(out) channels from maize subsidiary cells were examined, showing that MgATP as well as MgADP function as channel activators. In addition to K(out) channels, these studies revealed the presence of another outward-rectifying channel type (MgC) in the plasma membrane that however gates in a nucleotide-independent manner. MgC represents a new channel type distinguished from K(out) channels by fast activation kinetics, inhibition by elevated intracellular Mg(2+) concentration, permeability for K(+) as well as for Na(+) and insensitivity towards TEA(+). Similar observations made for guard cells from Zea mays and Vicia faba suggest a conserved regulation of channel-mediated K(+) and Na(+) transport in both cell types and species.  相似文献   

5.
Stomatal closure is known to be associated with early defence responses of plant cells triggered by microbe-associated molecular patterns (MAMPs). However, the molecular mechanisms underlying these guard-cell responses have not yet been elucidated. We therefore studied pathogen-induced changes in ion channel activity in Hordeum vulgare guard cells. Barley mildew (Blumeria graminis) hyphae growing on leaves inhibited light-induced stomatal opening, starting at 9 h after inoculation, when appressoria had developed. Alternatively, stomatal closure was induced by nano-infusion of chitosan via open stomata into the sub-stomatal cavity. Experiments using intracellular double-barreled micro-electrodes revealed that mildew stimulated S-type (slow) anion channels in guard cells. These channels enable the efflux of anions from guard cells and also promote K(+) extrusion by altering the plasma membrane potential. Stimulation of S-type anion channels was also provoked by nano-infusion of chitosan. These data suggest that MAMPs of mildew hyphae penetrating the cuticle provoke activation of S-type anion channels in guard cells. In response, guard cells extrude K(+) salts, resulting in stomatal closure. Plasma membrane anion channels probably represent general targets of MAMP signaling in plants, as these elicitors depolarize the plasma membrane of various cell types.  相似文献   

6.
Electrical properties of the plasma membrane of guard cell protoplasts isolated from stomates of Vicia faba leaves were studied by application of the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique. The two types of K+ currents that have recently been identified in guard cells may allow efflux of K+ during stomatal closing, and uptake of K+ during stomatal opening (Schroeder et al., 1987). A detailed characterization of ion transport properties of the inward-rectifying (IK+,in) and the outward-rectifying (IK+,out) K+ conductance is presented here. The permeability ratios of IK+,in and IK+,out currents for K+ over monovalent alkali metal ions were determined. The resulting permeability sequences (PK+ greater than PRb+ greater than PNa+ greater than PLi+ much greater than PCs+) corresponded closely to the ion specificity of guard cell movements in V. faba. Neither K+ currents exhibited significant inactivation when K+ channels were activated for prolonged periods (greater than 10 min). The absence of inactivation may permit long durations of K+ fluxes, which occur during guard cell movements. Activation potentials of inward K+ currents were not shifted when external K+ concentrations were changed. This differs strongly from the behavior of inward-rectifying K+ channels in animal tissue. Blue light and fusicoccin induce hyperpolarization by stimulation of an electrogenic pump. From slow-whole-cell recordings it was concluded that electrogenic pumps require cytoplasmic substrates for full activation and that the magnitude of the pump current is sufficient to drive K+ uptake through IK+,in channels. First, direct evidence was gained for the hypothesis that IK+,in channels are a molecular pathway for K+ accumulation by the finding that IK+,in was blocked by Al3+ ions, which are known to inhibit stomatal opening but not closing. The results presented in this study strongly support a prominent role for IK+,in and IK+,out channels in K+ transport across the plasma membrane of guard cells.  相似文献   

7.
Stomatal guard cells control CO(2) uptake and water loss between plants and the atmosphere. Stomatal closure in response to the drought stress hormone, abscisic acid (ABA), results from anion and K(+) release from guard cells. Previous studies have shown that cytosolic Ca(2+) elevation and ABA activate S-type anion channels in the plasma membrane of guard cells, leading to stomatal closure. However, membrane-bound regulators of abscisic acid signaling and guard cell anion channels remain unknown. Here we show that the ATP binding cassette (ABC) protein AtMRP5 is localized to the plasma membrane. Mutation in the AtMRP5 ABC protein impairs abscisic acid and cytosolic Ca(2+) activation of slow (S-type) anion channels in the plasma membrane of guard cells. Interestingly, atmrp5 insertion mutant guard cells also show impairment in abscisic acid activation of Ca(2+)-permeable channel currents in the plasma membrane of guard cells. These data provide evidence that the AtMRP5 ABC transporter is a central regulator of guard cell ion channel during abscisic acid and Ca(2+) signal transduction in guard cells.  相似文献   

8.
Pairs of guard cells form small pores called stoma in the epidermis, and the reversible swelling and shrinking of these guard cells regulate the stomatal apertures. The well-documented changes in guard cell volume have been associated with their vacuolar structures. To investigate the contribution of the guard cell vacuoles to stomatal movement, the dynamics of these vacuolar structures were recently monitored during stomatal movement in vacuolar-membrane visualized Arabidopsis plants. Calculation of the vacuolar volume and surface area after reconstruction of three-dimensional images revealed a decrease in the vacuolar volume but an increase in the vacuolar surface area upon stomatal closure. These results implied the possible acceleration of membrane trafficking to the vacuole upon stomatal closure and membrane recycling from the vacuole to the plasma membrane upon stomatal opening. To clarify and quantify membrane trafficking during stomatal movement, we describe in this addendum our development of an improved image processing system.Key words: stomata, guard cells, vacuole, membrane traffic, image processing  相似文献   

9.
Roles of ion channels and transporters in guard cell signal transduction   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Pandey S  Zhang W  Assmann SM 《FEBS letters》2007,581(12):2325-2336
Stomatal complexes consist of pairs of guard cells and the pore they enclose. Reversible changes in guard cell volume alter the aperture of the pore and provide the major regulatory mechanism for control of gas exchange between the plant and the environment. Stomatal movement is facilitated by the activity of ion channels and ion transporters found in the plasma membrane and vacuolar membrane of guard cells. Progress in recent years has elucidated the molecular identities of many guard cell transport proteins, and described their modulation by various cellular signal transduction components during stomatal opening and closure prompted by environmental and endogenous stimuli.  相似文献   

10.
Liu K  Fu H  Bei Q  Luan S 《Plant physiology》2000,124(3):1315-1326
A number of studies show that environmental stress conditions such as drought, high salt, and air pollutants increase polyamine levels in plant cells. However, little is understood about the physiological function of elevated polyamine levels. We report here that polyamines regulate the voltage-dependent inward K(+) channel in the plasma membrane of guard cells and modulate stomatal aperture, a plant "sensor" to environmental changes. All natural polyamines, including spermidine, spermine, cadaverine, and putrescine, strongly inhibited opening and induced closure of stomata. Whole-cell patch-clamp analysis showed that intracellular application of polyamines inhibited the inward K(+) current across the plasma membrane of guard cells. Single-channel recording analysis indicated that polyamine regulation of the K(+) channel requires unknown cytoplasmic factors. In an effort to identify the target channel at the molecular level, we found that spermidine inhibited the inward K(+) current carried by KAT1 channel that was functionally expressed in a plant cell model. These findings suggest that polyamines target KAT1-like inward K(+) channels in guard cells and modulate stomatal movements, providing a link between stress conditions, polyamine levels, and stomatal regulation.  相似文献   

11.
Inward-rectifying K+ (K+in) channels in the guard cell plasma membrane have been suggested to function as a major pathway for K+ influx into guard cells during stomatal opening. When K+in channels were blocked with external Cs+ in wild-type Arabidopsis guard cells, light-induced stomatal opening was reduced. Transgenic Arabidopsis plants were generated that expressed a mutant of the guard cell K+in channel, KAT1, which shows enhanced resistance to the Cs+ block. Stomata in these transgenic lines opened in the presence of external Cs+. Patch-clamp experiments with transgenic guard cells showed that inward K+(in) currents were blocked less by Cs+ than were K+ currents in controls. These data provide direct evidence that KAT1 functions as a plasma membrane K+ channel in vivo and that K+in channels constitute an important mechanism for light-induced stomatal opening. In addition, biophysical properties of K+in channels in guard cells indicate that components in addition to KAT1 may contribute to the formation of K+in channels in vivo.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Stomatal guard cells are unique as a plant cell model and, because of the depth of knowledge now to hand on ion transport and its regulation, serve as an excellent model for the analysis of stimulus-response coupling in higher plants. Parallel controls - mediated by Ca(2+), H(+) protein kinases and phosphatases - regulate the gating of the K(+) and Cl(-) channels that facilitate solute flux for stomatal movements. A growing body of evidence now indicates that oscillations in the cytosolic free concentration of Ca(2+) contribute to a 'signalling cassette', which is integrated within these events through an unusual coupling with membrane voltage. Additional developments during the past two years point to events in membrane traffic that play complementary roles in stomatal control. Research in these areas, especially, is now adding entirely new dimensions to our understanding of guard cell signalling.  相似文献   

14.
Stomata open in response to red and blue light. Red light-induced stomatal movement is mediated by guard cell chloroplasts and related to K+-uptake into these motor cells. We have combined a new type of microchlorophyll fluorometer with the patch-clamp technique for parallel studies of the photosynthetic electron transport and activity of plasma membrane K+ channels in single guard cell protoplast. In the whole-cell configuration and presence of ATP in the patch-pipette, the activity of the K+-uptake channels remained constant throughout the course of an experiment (up to 30 min) while photosynthetic activity declined to about 50%. In the absence of ATP inward K+ currents declined in a time-dependent manner. Under these ATP-free conditions, photosynthetic electron transport was completely blocked within 8 min. ADP together with orthophosphate was able to prevent inhibition of photosynthetic electron transport and run-down of K+-channel activity. The results demonstrate that the combination of these two techniques is suited to directly study cytosolic factors as common regulators of photosynthesis and plasma membrane transport within a single-cell.  相似文献   

15.
Stomatal closing requires the efflux of K+ from the large vacuolar organelle into the cytosol and across the plasma membrane of guard cells. More than 90% of the K+ released from guard cells during stomatal closure originates from the guard cell vacuole. However, the corresponding molecular mechanisms for the release of K+ from guard cell vacuoles have remained unknown. Rises in the cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration have been shown to trigger ion efflux from guard cells, resulting in stomatal closure. Here, we report a novel type of largely voltage-independent K+-selective ion channel in the vacuolar membrane of guard cells that is activated by physiological increases in the cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration. These vacuolar K+ (VK) channels had a single channel conductance of 70 pS with 100 mM KCI on both sides of the membrane and were highly selective for K+ over NH4+ and Rb+. Na+, Li+, and Cs+ were not measurably permeant. The Ca2+, voltage, and pH dependences, high selectivity for K+, and high density of VK channels in the vacuolar membrane of guard cells suggest a central role for these K+ channels in the initiation and control of K+ release from the vacuole to the cytoplasm required for stomatal closure. The activation of K+-selective VK channels can shift the vacuolar membrane to more positive potentials on the cytoplasmic side, sufficient to activate previously described slow vacuolar cation channels (SV-type). Analysis of the ionic selectivity of SV channels demonstrated a Ca2+ over K+ selectivity (permeability ratio for Ca2+ to K+ of ~3:1) of these channels in broad bean guard cells and red beet vacuoles, suggesting that SV channels play an important role in Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release from the vacuole during stomatal closure. A model is presented suggesting that the interaction of VK and SV channel activities is crucial in regulating vacuolar K+ and Ca2+ release during stomatal closure. Furthermore, the possibility that the ubiquitous SV channels may represent a general mechanism for Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release from higher plant vacuoles is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Slow anion channels in the plasma membrane of guard cells have been suggested to constitute an important control mechanism for long-term ion efflux, which produces stomatal closing. Identification of pharmacological blockers of these slow anion channels is instrumental for understanding plant anion channel function and structure. Patch clamp studies were performed on guard cell protoplasts to identify specific extracellular inhibitors of slow anion channels. Extracellular application of the anion channel blockers NPPB and IAA-94 produced a strong inhibition of slow anion channels in the physiological voltage range with half inhibition constants (K1/2) of 7 and 10 [mu]M, respectively. Single slow anion channels that had a high open probability at depolarized potentials were identified. Anion channels had a main conductance state of 33 [plus or minus] 8 pS and were inhibited by IAA-94. DIDS, which has been shown to be a potent blocker of rapid anion channels in guard cells (K1/2 = 0.2 [mu]M), blocked less than 20% of peak slow anion currents at extracellular or cytosolic concentrations of 100 [mu]M. The pharmacological properties of slow anion channels described here differ from those recently described for rapid anion channels in guard cells, fortifying the finding that two highly distinct types or modes of voltage- and second messenger-dependent anion channel currents coexist in the guard cell plasma membrane. Bioassays using anion channel blockers provide evidence that slow anion channel currents play a substantial role in the regulation of stomatal closing. Interestingly, slow anion channels may also function as a negative regulator during stomatal opening under the experimental conditions applied here. The identification of specific blockers of slow anion channels reported here permits detailed studies of cell biological functions, modulation, and structural components of slow anion channels in guard cells and other higher plant cells.  相似文献   

17.
Aquaporins such as the plasma membrane intrinsic proteins (PIPs) allow water to move through cell membranes and are vital for stomatal movement in plants. Despite their importance, the dynamic changes in aquaporins during water efflux and influx have not been directly observed in real time in vivo. Here, to determine which factors regulate these changes during the bidirectional translocation of water, we examined aquaporin dynamics during the stomatal immune response to the bacterial flagellin-derived peptide flg22. The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) aquaporin mutant pip2;1 showed defects in the flg22-induced stomatal response. Variable-angle total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy revealed that the movement dynamics and dwell times of AQ6]GFP-AtPIP2;1 in guard cells and subsidiary cells exhibited cell type-specific dependencies on flg22. The cytoskeleton, rather than the cell wall, was the major factor regulating AtPIP2;1 dynamics, although both the cytoskeleton and cell wall might form bounded domains that restrict the diffusion of AtPIP2;1 in guard cells and subsidiary cells. Finally, our analysis revealed the different roles of cortical actin and microtubules in regulating AtPIP2;1 dynamics in guard cells, as well as subsidiary cells, under various conditions. Our observations shed light on the heterogeneous mechanisms that regulate membrane protein dynamics in plants in response to pathogens.  相似文献   

18.
In the light of stomatal opening: new insights into 'the Watergate'   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Stomata can be regarded as hydraulically driven valves in the leaf surface, which open to allow CO2 uptake and close to prevent excessive loss of water. Movement of these 'Watergates' is regulated by environmental conditions, such as light, CO2 and humidity. Guard cells can sense environmental conditions and function as motor cells within the stomatal complex. Stomatal movement results from the transport of K+ salts across the guard cell membranes. In this review, we discuss the biophysical principles and mechanisms of stomatal movement and relate these to ion transport at the plasma membrane and vacuolar membrane. Studies with isolated guard cells, combined with recordings on single guard cells in intact plants, revealed that light stimulates stomatal opening via blue light-specific and photosynthetic-active radiation-dependent pathways. In addition, guard cells sense changes in air humidity and the water status of distant tissues via the stress hormone abscisic acid (ABA). Guard cells thus provide an excellent system to study cross-talk, as multiple signaling pathways induce both short- and long-term responses in these sensory cells.  相似文献   

19.
Stomatal opening, which controls gas exchanges between plants and the atmosphere, results from an increase in turgor of the two guard cells that surround the pore of the stoma. KAT1 was the only inward K(+) channel shown to be expressed in Arabidopsis guard cells, where it was proposed to mediate a K(+) influx that enables stomatal opening. We report that another Arabidopsis K(+) channel, KAT2, is expressed in guard cells. More than KAT1, KAT2 displays functional features resembling those of native inward K(+) channels in guard cells. Coexpression in Xenopus oocytes and two-hybrid experiments indicated that KAT1 and KAT2 can form heteromultimeric channels. The data indicate that KAT2 plays a crucial role in the stomatal opening machinery.  相似文献   

20.
C. K. Pallaghy 《Planta》1971,101(4):287-295
Summary The correlation between stomatal action and potassium movement in the epidermis of Zea mays was examined in isolated epidermal strips floated on distilled water. Stomatal opening in the isolated epidermis is reversible in response to alternate periods of light or darkness, and is always correlated with a shift in the potassium content of the guard cells. K accumulates in guard cells during stomatal opening, and moves from the guard cells into the subsidiary cells during rapid stomatal closure. When epidermal strips are illuminated in normal air, as against CO2-free air, the stomata do not open and there is a virtually complete depletion of K from the stomatal apparatus. In darkness CO2-containing air inhibits stomatal opening and K accumulation in guard cells, but does not lead to a depletion of K from the stomata as observed in the light.  相似文献   

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