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1.
Plants have developed strategies to circumvent limitations in water supply through the adjustment of stomatal aperture in relation to the photosynthetic capacity (water-use efficiency). The CO2 sensor of guard cells, reporting on the metabolic status of the photosynthetic tissue, is, however, as yet unknown. We elucidated whether extracellular malate has the capability to serve as a signal metabolite in regulating the membrane properties of guard cells. Patch-clamp studies showed that slight variations in the external malate concentration induced major alterations in the voltage-dependent activity of the guard cell anion channel (GCAC1). Superfusion of guard cell protoplasts with malate solutions in the physiological range caused the voltage-gate to shift towards hyperpolarized potentials (Km(mal) = 0.4 mM elicits a 38 mV shift). The selectivity sequence of the anion channel NO3- (4.2) > or = I- (3.9) > Br- (1.9) > Cl- (1) >> mal (0.1) indicates that malate is able to permeate GCAC1. The binding site for shifting the gate is, however, located on the extracellular face of the channel since cytoplasmic malate proved ineffective. Single-channel analysis indicates that extracellular malate affects the voltage-dependent mean open time rather than the unitary conductance of GCAC1. In contrast to malate the rise in the extracellular Cl- concentration increases the unit conductance of the anion efflux channel. We suggest that stomata sense changes in the intercellular CO2 concentration and thus the photosynthetic activity of the mesophyll via feedback regulation of anion efflux from guard cells through malate-sensitive GCAC1.  相似文献   

2.
Anions modify the response of guard-cell anion channels to auxin   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
G. Lohse  R. Hedrich 《Planta》1995,197(3):546-552
The anion channel in the guard-cell plasma membrane of Vicia faba, GCAC1, possesses recognition sites for the plant growth hormone auxin at the extracellular mouth of the channel (Marten et al. 1991, Nature 353:759-762). Using the patch-clamp technique we could demonstrate that auxins induced a shift of the voltage dependence of the anion channel to hyperpolarized potentials; the shift was attenuated during an increase in the extracellular chloride concentration, indicating that chloride shields the hormone-binding site. The auxin-induced shift was concentration-dependent, characterized by a Michaelis-Menten type of behaviour with a half saturation constant (K m) of about 10 M naphthalene-1-acetic acid (1-NAA) in the presence of 2 mM Cl and 12 M in 80 mM Cl. In the presence of malate, another gating modulator of GCAC1, auxins were less effective, indicating that both ligands compete for common sites. Inactive auxins with respect to stomatal opening or stimulation of the plasma membrane H+-ATPase, such as 2-NAA, modulated the activation threshold and kinetics of GCAC1 similar to the active form 1-NAA. At a concentration of 100 M 2-NAA the peak-current potential shifted by about 30 mV more negative.Abbreviations GCAC1 guard cell anion channel 1 - 1-NAA naphthalene-1-acetic acid - 2-NAA naphthalene-2-acetic acid - TEA tetraethylammonium  相似文献   

3.
Maize plants (Zea mays L. hybrid INRA 508) were placed under controlled conditions of light and CO2 partial pressure. The K+, Cl? and P contents were then determined by X-ray microanalysis in the bulbous end of guard cells and in the center of subsidiary cells. The results were interpreted in connection with the stomatal conductance at the time of sampling. In normal air, the K+ and Cl? contents in guard cells only rose from a light threshold of about 300 μmol m?2 s?1 at which stomata were already largely open. At 600 μmol m?2 s?1, the K+ and Cl? levels in guard cells attained values that were 3- and 8-fold greater, respectively, than the values observed in darkness. The K+ and Cl? contents in the subsidiary cells remained quite constant irrespective of the light conditions. CO2-free air in darkness induced a significant K+ influx towards guard and subsidiary cells. Under light and in CO2-free air, the K+ and Cl? contents dramatically increased in the guard cells, but slightly decreased in the subsidiary cells. Thus, when subjected to strong light in CO2-free air, the K+ and Cl? contents in the subsidiary cells were approximately equal to those measured in normal air conditions. In the guard cells, stomatal opening was associated with a marked shift of the Cl?/K+ ratio – from 0.3 for closed stomata to ca 1 for fully open stomata. This could imply a slow change in the nature of the principal counterion accompanying K+ during stomatal opening. The content of P in guard cells appeared, in contrast to that of K+ and Cl?, to be practically independent of stomatal aperture.  相似文献   

4.
Ion channels in the plasma membrane of guard cells provide key mechanisms in signal perception and volume regulation during stomatal movement. Recent studies have suggested that the strongly voltage-dependent, inactivating g uard c ell a nion c hannel (GCAC1) acts as a sensor of the ambient extracellular CO2 concentration and as a target of modulation by nucleotides and Ca2+ ions. Applying the patch-clamp technique it is demonstrated here that GCAC1 is activated by cytoplasmic ATP in a pH-dependent manner. When the apoplastic pH was buffered to 5.6 and the cytosolic pH dropped step-wise from 7.8 to 5.6, the single-channel activity increased as a function of proton concentration. This pH-sensitivity is characterized by a titratable site with an apparent pK value around 6.9. While the steepness and direction of the transmembrane pH gradient did not affect the kinetics of activation, deactivation and fast inactivation of the whole-cell anion current, the kinetics of slow inactivation and reactivation were strongly influenced. When at a constant intracellular proton concentration of pH 7.2 the external pH decreased from 7.2 to 5.6 the time constants of slow inactivation and the half-times of reactivation increased two- and sevenfold, respectively. The mechanism of nucleotide activation of GCAC1 was quantitatively analysed on the level of single-channel events. Using inside-out, cell-free membrane patches, GCAC1 half-activated around 0.4 mM ATP. The sigmoidal dose-dependence of anion channel activation could be well fitted with an apparent Hill coefficient of 3.6. This behaviour might indicate that the activation process involves a strongly cooperative interaction of four ATP-binding sites. Neither ATP nor its non-hydrolysable analogue AMP-PMP, which also activated GCAC1, altered the voltage-dependent gating. AMP-PMP stimulation and the insensitivity of GCAC1 towards the phosphatase inhibitor, okadaic acid, and the kinase inhibitors, staurosporine and H-7, provided evidence that nucleotide binding rather than phosphorylation caused channel activation. Since the time- and voltage-dependent activity of GCAC1 is strongly modulated by ATP and protons, this channel is capable of sensing changes in the energy status, acid metabolism and the H+ ATPase activity of guard cells.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of various K+ levels in combination with Cl− or iminodiacetate (IDA& minus;) on stomatal responsesin isolated epidermal strips of Vicia faba L. were examinedin order to determine the role of malate during guard cell movements.Responses of guard cells to ABA, kinetin, and varying CO2 levelswere similar when epidermal strips were floated on KCL or KIDAat 10 mM; such responses were typical in that ABA caused closure,kinetin stimulated opening in ambient air, and apertures weregreater in CO2-free than ambient air. Maximal stomatal openingwas observed in both ambient and CO2-free air with KCL at 100mM. The transfer of epidermal strips from 100 mM KCL to solutionsof 100 mM KCL supplemented with ABA or kinetin did not bringabout changes in stomatal aperture. KCL at 100 mM supporteda greater degree of stomatal opening than did 100 mM KIDA irrespectiveof the CO2 content of the air. In CO2-free air transfer of epidermalstrips from 100 mM KIDA to solutions containing 100 mM KIDAsupplemented with ABA or kinetin caused little change in stomatalaperture, whereas, in ambient air, the same treatments resultedin stomatal opening. The results are discussed in relation tothe role of malate during guard cell movements.  相似文献   

6.
GCAC1 is a strongly voltage-dependent anion channel in the guard-cell plasma membrane of Vicia faba . In patch–clamp experiments, we have investigated the permeation and gating properties of GCAC1 with respect to its anion dependence in the whole-cell and excised-patch configuration. The relative permeability followed the order SCN > NO3 > Br > Cl, while the single-channel conductances in symmetrical anionic solutions exhibited a nearly inverse sequence. The Cl dependence of inward currents (Cl release) is characterized by a maximum single-channel conductance of 89 pS half-saturating at 87 mM cytoplasmic chloride. In addition to this substrate saturation, anion release was also dependent on the external Cl activity ( K m = 16 mM). In the presence of SCN and Cl, the single-channel conductance exhibited an anomalous mole-fraction dependence, identifying GCAC1 as a multi-ion single-file pore. Using anions with increasing ionic size, a minimum pore diameter of 0.5 nm was assumed from their relative permeabilities. In line with an anion-selective channel, a tenfold increase in the extracellular anion activity shifted the reversal potential by –59.8 mV. Simultaneously, the half-activation potential shifted negatively by about 23 mV. A further analysis of the anion dependence revealed that extracellular rather than cytosolic anions affect the gating process of GCAC1. From anion substitution experiments, we conclude that anion concentration and species determines both permeation and gating of the plant anion channel GCAC1.  相似文献   

7.
Native tallgrass prairie in NE Kansas was exposed to elevated (twice ambient) or ambient atmospheric CO2 levels in open-top chambers. Within chambers or in adjacent unchambered plots, the dominant C4 grass, Andropogon gerardii, was subjected to fluctuations in sunlight similar to that produced by clouds or within canopy shading (full sun > 1500 μmol m−2 s−1 versus 350 μmol m−2 s−1 shade) and responses in gas exchange were measured. These field experiments demonstrated that stomatal conductance in A. gerardii achieved new steady state levels more rapidly after abrupt changes in sunlight at elevated CO2 when compared to plants at ambient CO2. This was due primarily to the 50% reduction in stomatal conductance at elevated CO2, but was also a result of more rapid stomatal responses. Time constants describing stomatal responses were significantly reduced (29–33%) at elevated CO2. As a result, water loss was decreased by as much as 57% (6.5% due to more rapid stomatal responses). Concurrent increases in leaf xylem pressure potential during periods of sunlight variability provided additional evidence that more rapid stomatal responses at elevated CO2 enhanced plant water status. CO2-induced alterations in the kinetics of stomatal responses to variable sunlight will likely enhance direct effects of elevated CO2 on plant water relations in all ecosystems.  相似文献   

8.
Stomata are the major gates in plant leaf that allow water and gas exchange, which is essential for plant transpiration and photosynthesis. Stomatal movement is mainly controlled by the ion channels and transporters in guard cells. In Arabidopsis, the inward Shaker K+ channels, such as KAT1 and KAT2, are responsible for stomatal opening. However, the characterization of inward K+ channels in maize guard cells is limited. In the present study, we identified two KAT1‐like Shaker K+ channels, KZM2 and KZM3, which were highly expressed in maize guard cells. Subcellular analysis indicated that KZM2 and KZM3 can localize at the plasma membrane. Electrophysiological characterization in HEK293 cells revealed that both KZM2 and KZM3 were inward K+ (Kin) channels, but showing distinct channel kinetics. When expressed in Xenopus oocytes, only KZM3, but not KZM2, can mediate inward K+ currents. However, KZM2 can interact with KZM3 forming heteromeric Kin channel. In oocytes, KZM2 inhibited KZM3 channel conductance and negatively shifted the voltage dependence of KZM3. The activation of KZM2–KZM3 heteromeric channel became slower than the KZM3 channel. Patch‐clamping results showed that the inward K+ currents of maize guard cells were significantly increased in the KZM2 RNAi lines. In addition, the RNAi lines exhibited faster stomatal opening after light exposure. In conclusion, the presented results demonstrate that KZM2 functions as a negative regulator to modulate the Kin channels in maize guard cells. KZM2 and KZM3 may form heteromeric Kin channel and control stomatal opening in maize.  相似文献   

9.
Stomatal pores formed by a pair of guard cells in the leaf epidermis control gas exchange and transpirational water loss. Stomatal closure is mediated by the release of potassium and anions from guard cells. Anion efflux from guard cells involves slow (S‐type) and rapid (R‐type) anion channels. Recently the SLAC1 gene has been shown to encode the slow, voltage‐independent anion channel component in guard cells. In contrast, the R‐type channel still awaits identification. Here, we show that AtALMT12, a member of the aluminum activated malate transporter family in Arabidopsis, represents a guard cell R‐type anion channel. AtALMT12 is highly expressed in guard cells and is targeted to the plasma membrane. Plants lacking AtALMT12 are impaired in dark‐ and CO2‐induced stomatal closure, as well as in response to the drought‐stress hormone abscisic acid. Patch‐clamp studies on guard cell protoplasts isolated from atalmt12 mutants revealed reduced R‐type currents compared with wild‐type plants when malate is present in the bath media. Following expression of AtALMT12 in Xenopus oocytes, voltage‐dependent anion currents reminiscent to R‐type channels could be activated. In line with the features of the R‐type channel, the activity of heterologously expressed AtALMT12 depends on extracellular malate. Thereby this key metabolite and osmolite of guard cells shifts the threshold for voltage activation of AtALMT12 towards more hyperpolarized potentials. R‐Type channels, like voltage‐dependent cation channels in nerve cells, are capable of transiently depolarizing guard cells, and thus could trigger membrane potential oscillations, action potentials and initiate long‐term anion and K+ efflux via SLAC1 and GORK, respectively.  相似文献   

10.
Michael R. Blatt 《Planta》1987,170(2):272-287
The membrane electrical characteristics of stomatal guard cells in epidermal strips from Vicia faba L. and Commelina communis L. were explored using conventional electrophysiological methods, but with double-barrelled microelectrodes containing dilute electrolyte solutions. When electrodes were filled with the customary 1–3 M KCl solutions, membrane potentials and resistances were low, typically decaying over 2–5 min to near-30 mV and <0.2 k·cm2 in cells bathed in 0.1 mM KCl and 1 mM Ca2+, pH 7.4. By contrast, cells impaled with electrodes containing 50 or 200 mM K+-acetate gave values of-182±7 mV and 16±2 k·cm2 (input resistances 0.8–3.1 G, n=54). Potentials as high as (-) 282 mV (inside negative) were recorded, and impalement were held for up to 2 h without appreciable decline in either membrane parameter. Comparison of results obtained with several electrolytes indicated that Cl- leakage from the microelectrode was primarily responsible for the decline in potential and resistance recorded with the molar KCl electrolytes. Guard cells loaded with salt from the electrodes also acquired marked potential and conductance responses to external Ca2+, which are tentatively ascribed to a K+ conductance (channel) at the guard cell plasma membrane.Measurements using dilute K+-acetate-filled electrodes revealed, in the guard cells, electrical properties common to plant and fungal cell membranes. The cells showed a high selectivity for K+ over Na+ (permeability ratio PNa/PK=0.006) and a near-Nernstian potential response to external pH over the range 4.5–7.4 (apparent PH/PK=500–600). Little response to external Ca2+ was observed, and the cells were virtually insensitive to CO2. These results are discussed in the context of primary, charge-carrying transport at the guard cell plasma membrane, and with reference to possible mechanisms for K+ transport during stomatal movements. They discount previous notions of Ca2+-and CO2-mediated transport control. It is argued, also, that passive (diffusional) mechanisms are unlikely to contribute to K+ uptake during stomatal opening, despite membrane potentials which, under certain, well-defined conditions, lie negative of the potassium equilibrium potential likely prevailing.Abbreviations and symbols EGTA ethylene glycol-bis(-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - Hepes 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid - Mes 2-(N-morpholino) propanesulfornic acid - E equilibrium potential - Gm membrane conductance - Rin input resistance - Vm membrane potential  相似文献   

11.
Michael R. Blatt 《Planta》1990,180(3):445-455
Evidence of a role for abscisic acid (ABA) in signalling conditions of water stress and promoting stomatal closure is convincing, but past studies have left few clues as to its molecular mechanism(s) of action; arguments centred on changes in H+-pump activity and membrane potential, especially, remain ambiguous without the fundamental support of a rigorous electrophysiological analysis. The present study explores the response to ABA of K+ channels at the membrane of intact guard cells ofVicia faba L. Membrane potentials were recorded before and during exposures to ABA, and whole-cell currents were measured at intervals throughout to quantitate the steady-state and time-dependent characteristics of the K+ channels. On adding 10 M ABA in the presence of 0.1, 3 or 10 mM extracellular K+, the free-running membrane potential (V m) shifted negative-going (–)4–7 mV in the first 5 min of exposure, with no consistent effect thereafter. Voltage-clamp measurements, however, revealed that the K+-channel current rose to between 1.84- and 3.41-fold of the controls in the steady-state with a mean halftime of 1.1 ± 0.1 min. Comparable changes in current return via the leak were also evident and accounted for the minimal response inV m. Calculated atV m, the K+ currents translated to an average 2.65-fold rise in K+ efflux with ABA. Abscisic acid was not observed to alter either K+-current activation or deactivation.These results are consistent with an ABA-evoked mobilization of K+ channels or channel conductance, rather than a direct effect of the phytohormone on K+-channel gating. The data discount notions that large swings in membrane voltage are a prerequisite to controlling guard-cell K+ flux. Instead, thev highlight a rise in membranecapacity for K+ flux, dependent on concerted modulations of K+-channel and leak currents, and sufficiently rapid to account generally for the onset of K+ loss from guard cells and stomatal closure in ABA.  相似文献   

12.
Monda K  Negi J  Iio A  Kusumi K  Kojima M  Hashimoto M  Sakakibara H  Iba K 《Planta》2011,234(3):555-563
The Arabidopsis Cape Verde Islands (Cvi-0) ecotype is known to differ from other ecotypes with respect to environmental stress responses. We analyzed the stomatal behavior of Cvi-0 plants, in response to environmental signals. We investigated the responses of stomatal conductance and aperture to high [CO2] in the Cvi-0 and Col-0 ecotypes. Cvi-0 showed constitutively higher stomatal conductance and more stomatal opening than Col-0. Cvi-0 stomata opened in response to light, but the response was slow. Under low humidity, stomatal opening was increased in Cvi-0 compared to Col-0. We then assessed whether low humidity affects endogenous ABA levels in Cvi-0. In response to low humidity, Cvi-0 had much higher ABA levels than Col-0. However, epidermal peels experiments showed that Cvi-0 stomata were insensitive to ABA. Measurements of organic and inorganic ions in Cvi-0 guard cell protoplasts indicated an over-accumulation of osmoregulatory anions (malate and Cl). This irregular anion homeostasis in the guard cells may explain the constitutive stomatal opening phenotypes of the Cvi-0 ecotype, which lacks high [CO2]-induced and low humidity-induced stomatal closure.  相似文献   

13.
The apoplastic pH of guard cells probably acidifies in response to light, since light induces proton extrusion by both guard cells and epidermal leaf cells. From the data presented here, it is concluded that these apoplastic pH changes will affect K+ fluxes in guard cells of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. Guard cells of this species were impaled with double-barrelled microelectrodes, to measure the membrane potential (Em) and the plasma-membrane conductance. Guard cells were found to exhibit two states with respect to their Em, a depolarized and a hyperpolarized state. Apoplastic acidification depolarized Em in both states, though the origin of the depolarization differed for each state. In the depolarized state, the change in Em was the result of a combined pH effect on instantaneously activating conductances and on the slow outward rectifying K+ channel (s-ORC). At a more acidic apoplastic pH, the current through instantaneously activated conductances became more inwardly directed, while the maximum conductance of s-ORC decreased. The effect on s-ORC was accompanied by an acceleration of activation and deactivation of the channel. Experiments with acid loading of guard cells indicated that the effect on s-ORC was due to a lowered intracellular pH, caused by apoplastic acidification. In the hyperpolarized state, the pH-induced depolarization was due to a direct effect of the apoplastic pH on the inward rectifying K+ channel. Acidification shifted the threshold potential of the channel to more positive values. This effect was accompanied by a decrease in activation times and an increase of deactivation times, of the channel. From the changes in Em and membrane conductance, the expected effect of acidification on K+ fluxes was calculated. It was concluded that apoplastic acidification will increase the K+-efflux in the depolarized state and reduce the K+-influx in the hyperpolarized state. Received: 28 April 1997 / Accepted: 10 November 1997  相似文献   

14.
Despite the availability of many mutants for signal transduction, Arabidopsis thaliana guard cells have so far not been used in electrophysiological research. Problems with the isolation of epidermal strips and the small size of A. thaliana guard cells were often prohibiting. In the present study these difficulties were overcome and guard cells were impaled with double-barreled microelectrodes. Membrane-potential recordings were often stable for over half an hour and voltage-clamp measurements could be conducted. The guard cells were found to exhibit two states. The majority of the guard cells had depolarized membrane potentials, which were largely dependent on external K+ concentrations. Other cells displayed spontaneous transitions to a more hyperpolarized state, at which the free-running membrane potential (Em) was not sensitive to the external K+ concentration. Two outward-rectifying conductances were identified in cells in the depolarized state. A slow outward-rectifying channel (s-ORC) had properties resembling the K+-selective ORC of Vicia faba guard cells (Blatt, 1988, J Membr Biol 102: 235–246). The activation and inactivation times and the activation potential, all depended on the reversal potential (Erev) of the s-ORC conductance. The s-ORC was blocked by Ba2+ (K1/2 = 0.3–1.3mM) and verapamil (K1/2 = 15–20 μM). A second rapid outward-rectifying conductance (r-ORC) activated instantaneously upon stepping the voltage to positive values and was stimulated by Ba2+. Inward-rectifying channels (IRC) were only observed in cells in the hyperpolarized state. The activation time and activation potential of this channel were not sensitive to the external K+ concentration. The slow activation of the IRC (t1/2 ≈ 0.5 s) and its negative activation potential (Vthreshold = −155 mV) resemble the values found for the KAT1 channel expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Bertl et al., 1995, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 92: 2701–2705). The results indicate that A. thaliana guard cells provide an excellent system for the study of signal transduction processes. Received: 28 March 1996 / Accepted: 11 November 1996  相似文献   

15.
Arbutus unedo is a sclerophyllous evergreen, characteristic of Mediterranean coastal scrub vegetation. In Italy, trees of A. unedo have been found close to natural CO2 vents where the mean atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration is about 2200 μmol mol?1. Comparisons were made between trees growing in elevated and ambient CO2 concentrations to test for evidence of adaptation to long-term exposure to elevated CO2. Leaves formed at elevated CO2 have a lower stomatal density and stomatal index and higher specific leaf area than those formed at ambient CO2, but there was no change in carbon to nitrogen ratios of the leaf tissue. Stomatal conductance was lower at elevated CO2 during rapid growth in the spring. In mid-summer, under drought stress, stomatal closure of all leaves occurred and in the autumn, when stress was relieved, the conductance of leaves at both elevated and ambient CO2 increased. In the spring, the stomatal conductance of the new flush of leaves at ambient CO2 was higher than the leaves at elevated CO2, increasing instantaneous water use efficiency at elevated CO2. Chlorophyll fluorescence measurements suggested that elevated CO2 provided some protection against photoinhibition in mid-summer. Analysis of A/Ci curves showed that there was no evidence of either upward or downward regulation of photosynthesis at elevated CO2. It is therefore anticipated that A. unedo will have higher growth rates as the ambient CO2 concentrations increase.  相似文献   

16.
A hydromechanical and biochemical model of stomatal conductance   总被引:17,自引:1,他引:16  
A mathematical model of stomatal conductance is presented. It is based on whole‐plant and epidermal hydromechanics, and on two hypotheses: (1) the osmotic gradient across guard cell membranes is proportional to the concentration of ATP in the guard cells; and (2) the osmotic gradient that can be sustained per unit of ATP is proportional to the turgor pressure of adjacent epidermal cells. In the present study, guard cell [ATP] is calculated using a previously published model that is based on a widely used biochemical model of C3 mesophyll photosynthesis. The conductance model for Vicia faba L. is parameterized and tested As with most other stomatal models, the present model correctly predicts the stomatal responses to variations in transpiration rate, irradiance and intercellular CO2. Unlike most other models, however, this model can predict the transient stomatal opening often observed before conductance declines in response to decreases in humidity, soil water potential, or xylem conductance. The model also explicitly accommodates the mechanical advantage of the epidermis and correctly predicts that stomata are relatively insensitive to the ambient partial pressure of oxygen, as a result of the assumed dependence on ATP concentration.  相似文献   

17.
The vesicle‐trafficking protein SYP121 (SYR1/PEN1) was originally identified in association with ion channel control at the plasma membrane of stomatal guard cells, although stomata of the Arabidopsis syp121 loss‐of‐function mutant close normally in ABA and high Ca2+. We have now uncovered a set of stomatal phenotypes in the syp121 mutant that reduce CO2 assimilation, slow vegetative growth and increase water use efficiency in the whole plant, conditional upon high light intensities and low relative humidity. Stomatal opening and the rise in stomatal transpiration of the mutant was delayed in the light and following Ca2+‐evoked closure, consistent with a constitutive form of so‐called programmed stomatal closure. Delayed reopening was observed in the syp121, but not in the syp122 mutant lacking the homologous gene product; the delay was rescued by complementation with wild‐type SYP121 and was phenocopied in wild‐type plants in the presence of the vesicle‐trafficking inhibitor Brefeldin A. K+ channel current that normally mediates K+ uptake for stomatal opening was suppressed in the syp121 mutant and, following closure, its recovery was slowed compared to guard cells of wild‐type plants. Evoked stomatal closure was accompanied by internalisation of GFP‐tagged KAT1 K+ channels in both wild‐type and syp121 mutant guard cells, but their subsequently recycling was slowed in the mutant. Our findings indicate that SYP121 facilitates stomatal reopening and they suggest that K+ channel traffic and recycling to the plasma membrane underpins the stress memory phenomenon of programmed closure in stomata. Additionally, they underline the significance of vesicle traffic for whole‐plant water use and biomass production, tying SYP121 function to guard cell membrane transport and stomatal control.  相似文献   

18.
PHOTOCONTROL OF STOMATAL MOVEMENTS   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
1. Opening in light is a feature common to the majority of functional stomata, but the current argument is against the traditional view that light is the principal environmental promoter of opening, because stomata can open in the dark in response to CO2 removal and/or temperature increase. In this review, evidence is provided that light is more efficient and effective than other physical factors in both producing and maintaining wide opening. However, light acts on stomata both directly and indirectly, in conjunction with changes in, for example, CO2 balance, water regime and temperature of the leaf tissue. 2. Three general categories of light effects on stomata are recognized: (a) photosynthetic effects driven by metabolic processes, induced or enhanced by light, (b) hydrophotic effects mediating through light-induced changes in epidermal turgor, and (c) photothermal effects arising from light-dependent changes in leaf temperature. 3. Photosynthetic effects involve both CO2 depletion, and starch mobilization, malate synthesis, H+ extrusion, and accumulation of K+ and C1- in guard cells; these processes are triggered by light of different qualities: (a) Both blue and red light are involved in photosynthetic CO2 fixation, utilizing energy from photosynthetic light reaction(s), which provides C precursors for synthesis of stornatal starch. (b) Blue light, but not red, enhances starch mobilization, PEP carboxylase activity and respiration. Accordingly, blue light is postulated to enhance hydrolysis of stornatal starch providing C3 precursors for malate synthesis via PEP-fixation of endogenous CO2; the active extrusion of H+, derived from malate, is coupled with K+ influx to guard cells. Malate and C1- are competitive anions, for K+, and one begins to play a progressively more important role as the other becomes limiting; in intact leaves, however, malate plays a more decisive role. These processes are driven by the energy from blue-light-enhanced respiration. (c) Both photosynthetic fixation and PEP carboxylation act as CO2 sensors, but the exact role of CO2 in the stornatal mechanism has yet to be determined. 4. Hydrophotic and photothermal effects facilitate guard cell expansion by releasing epidermal pressure through enhanced evaporative water loss, and are, therefore, indirect effects of light; photothermal effects may also contribute to metabolic processes outlined in paragraph 3. 5. Stomatal closure in the dark accompanies starch synthesis, malate reduction, efflux of K+ and C1- from guard cells, and accumulation of CO2 in substomatal cavities. Malate may be converted to starch via C2 compounds. Guard cells release K+ and C1- into apoplastic space, from which they are removed by neighbouring cells. The entry of K+ into neighbouring cells is supposed to be coupled with H+ extrusion. These processes are dependent on respiratory energy. 6. The differential abaxial and adaxial stomatal light responses are related to inherent metabolic differences between the two epidermes, but the biochemical basis is not known.  相似文献   

19.
Fusicoccin (FC) has long been known to promote K+ uptake in higher plant cells, including stomatal guard cells, yet the precise mechanism behind this enhancement remains uncertain. Membrane hyperpolarization, thought to arise from primary H+ pumping stimulated in FC, could help drive K+ uptake, but the extent to which FC stimulates influx and uptake frequently exceeds any reasonable estimates from Constant Field Theory based on changes in the free-running membrane potential (V m) alone; furthermore, unidirectional flux analyses have shown that in the toxin K+ (86Rb+) exchange plummets to 10% of the control (G.M. Clint and E.A.C. MacRobbie 1984, J. Exp. Bot.35 180–192). Thus, the activities of specific pathways for K+ movement across the membrane could be modified in FC. We have explored a role for K+ channels in mediating these fluxes in guard cells ofVicia faba L. The correspondence between FC-induced changes in chemical (86Rb+) flux and in electrical current under voltage clamp was followed, using the K+ channel blocker tetraethylammonium chloride (TEA) to probe tracer and charge movement through K+-selective channels. Parallel flux and electrical measurements were carried out when cells showed little evidence of primary pump activity, thus simplifying analyses. Under these conditions, outward-directed K+ channel current contributed appreciably to charge balance maintainingV m, and adding 10 mM TEA to block the current depolarized (positive-going)V m; TEA also reduced86Rb+ efflux by 68–80%. Following treatments with 10 M FC, both K+ channel current and86Rb+ efflux decayed, irreversbly and without apparent lag, to 10%–15% of the controls and with equivalent half-times (approx. 4 min). Fusicoccin also enhanced86Rb+ influx by 13.9-fold, but the influx proved largely insensitive to TEA. Overall, FC promotednet cation uptake in 0.1 mM K+ (Rb+), despite membrane potentials which were 30–60 mVpositive of the K+ equilibrium potential. These results tentatively link (chemical) cation efflux to charge movement through the K+ channels. They offer evidence of an energy-coupled mechanism for K+ uptake in guard cells. Finally, the data reaffirm early suspicions that FC alters profoundly the K+ transport capacity of the cells, independent of any changes in membrane potential.Abbreviations and symbols E K equilibrium potential for K+ - FC fusicoccin - Hepes 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineeth-anesulfonic acid - G m membrane (slope) conductance atV m - I-V current-voltage (relationship) - apparent rate constant for exchange - K i + , K 0 + intracellular, extracellular K+ (concentration) - TEA tetraethylammonium chloride - V m free-running membrane potential (difference)  相似文献   

20.
Stomata mediate gas exchange between the inter‐cellular spaces of leaves and the atmosphere. CO2 levels in leaves (Ci) are determined by respiration, photosynthesis, stomatal conductance and atmospheric [CO2]. [CO2] in leaves mediates stomatal movements. The role of guard cell photosynthesis in stomatal conductance responses is a matter of debate, and genetic approaches are needed. We have generated transgenic Arabidopsis plants that are chlorophyll‐deficient in guard cells only, expressing a constitutively active chlorophyllase in a guard cell specific enhancer trap line. Our data show that more than 90% of guard cells were chlorophyll‐deficient. Interestingly, approximately 45% of stomata had an unusual, previously not‐described, morphology of thin‐shaped chlorophyll‐less stomata. Nevertheless, stomatal size, stomatal index, plant morphology, and whole‐leaf photosynthetic parameters (PSII, qP, qN, FV′/FM′) were comparable with wild‐type plants. Time‐resolved intact leaf gas‐exchange analyses showed a reduction in stomatal conductance and CO2‐assimilation rates of the transgenic plants. Normalization of CO2 responses showed that stomata of transgenic plants respond to [CO2] shifts. Detailed stomatal aperture measurements of normal kidney‐shaped stomata, which lack chlorophyll, showed stomatal closing responses to [CO2] elevation and abscisic acid (ABA), while thin‐shaped stomata were continuously closed. Our present findings show that stomatal movement responses to [CO2] and ABA are functional in guard cells that lack chlorophyll. These data suggest that guard cell CO2 and ABA signal transduction are not directly modulated by guard cell photosynthesis/electron transport. Moreover, the finding that chlorophyll‐less stomata cause a ‘deflated’ thin‐shaped phenotype, suggests that photosynthesis in guard cells is critical for energization and guard cell turgor production.  相似文献   

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