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1.
Abscisic acid (ABA) induces a transient stimulation of 86Rb+ from isolated guard cells of Commelina communis L. When ABA is added after 30–50 min of wash-out in the absence of ABA, when tracer is almost entirely vacuolar, its effects on vacuolar release are measured. When ABA is added early in the wash-out (at 2–4 min), when both cytoplasm and vacuole are labelled, the resulting efflux includes both vacuolar and cytoplasmic contributions. Detailed comparison of rates of efflux in the absence of ABA, and in the presence of ABA added early and late in the wash-out, allows the effects of ABA on plasmalemma and tonoplast fluxes to be assessed. Three effects of ABA can be distinguished: these are stimulation of the 86Rb+ flux from vacuole to cytoplasm (by twofold to 6.7-fold); stimulation of the plasmalemma efflux, by up to twofold, a smaller factor than that of the tonoplast effect and variable between experiments; and a doubling of the half-time for cytoplasmic exchange in ABA, taken to reflect an increase in cytoplasmic ion content as ions flood out of the vacuole. Concentrations of ABA of 0.1–0.2 µM and 1–10 µM are equally effective in the stimulation of plasmalemma efflux, but the effects on tonoplast fluxes are both delayed and reduced at low external concentrations of ABA. It is argued that the delay reflects the need for a threshold internal ABA to be reached before the initiation of vacuolar release, and the reduction reflects the sensitivity of the extent of activation of tonoplast ion channels to concentration of internal ABA. It is likely that the plasmalemma change is mediated by external ABA, and could be the result of the modulation of the stretch-activated channel suggested previously.  相似文献   

2.
Uptake experiments and efflux compartmental analyses of abscisic acid (ABA) with acid treated epidermal peels of Valerianella locusta were performed to elucidate the mechanisms of transport of ABA across the plasmalemma and tonoplast of guard cells. ABA uptake across the plasmalemma is linearly correlated with external ABA concentration in the incubation medium. Under alkaline conditions ABA-uptake was not significantly above background, indicating that ABA uptake occurs mainly by diffusion of undissociated ABAH as the most permeable species, which is trapped afterwards in the alkaline cytosol as impermeable ABA?. Efflux analysis of ABA revealed a saturable component of ABA transfer across the tonoplast. A Woolf-Augustinsson-Hofstee analysis suggested the existence of two transport systems for ABA at the tonoplast. The high affinity transport system had a KM of 0.21 mol m?3 and a Vmax 85.8 amol ABA cell?1 h?1. Using the data of the uptake and efflux experiments we calculated the permeability coefficients of ABA for the plasmalemma and the tonoplast of guard cells, which are 2.46 10?7 m s–1 and 1.26 10?8m s?1, respectively. The distribution of the pH-probe (14C)-DMO between medium, cytosol and vacuole was investigated and used to calculate cytosolic and vacuolar pH. The vacuolar pH is too low to explain the high vacuolar ABA concentration by trapping of ABA?, whereas the cytosol is sufficiently alkaline to act as an efficient anion trap. Therefore we conclude that ABA transport across the guard cell tonoplast is catalyzed by a saturable uptake component.  相似文献   

3.
The phytohormone abscisic acid (ABA) triggers stomatal closing as a physiological response to drought stress. Several basic questions limit an understanding of the mechanism of ABA reception in guard cells. Whether primary ABA receptors are located on the extracellular side of the plasma membrane, within the intracellular space of guard cells, or both remains unknown. Furthermore, it is not clear whether ABA must be transported into guard cells to exert control over stomatal movements. In the present study, a combination of microinjection into guard cells and physiological assays of stomatal movements have been performed to determine primary sites of ABA reception in guard cells. Microinjection of ABA into guard cells of Commelina communis L. resulted in injected cytosolic concentrations of 50 to 200 [mu]M ABA and in additional experiments in lower concentrations of approximately 1 [mu]M ABA. Stomata with ABA-loaded guard cells (n > 180) showed opening similar to stomata with uninjected guard cells. The viability of guard cells following ABA injection was demonstrated by neutral red staining as well as monitoring of stomatal opening. Extracellular application of 10 [mu]M ABA inhibited stomatal opening by 98% at pH 6.15 and by 57% at pH 8.0. The pH dependence of extracellular ABA action may suggest a contribution of an intracellular ABA receptor to stomatal regulation. The findings presented here show that intracellular ABA alone does not suffice to inhibit stomatal opening under the imposed conditions. Furthermore, these data provide evidence that a reception site for ABA-mediated inhibition of stomatal opening is on the extracellular side of the plasma membrane of guard cells.  相似文献   

4.
Abscisic acid (ABA) raised the cytosolic pH and nitric oxide (NO) levels in guard cells while inducing stomatal closure in epidermis of Pisum sativum. Butyrate (a weak acid) reduced the cytosolic pH/NO production and prevented stomatal closure by ABA. Methylamine (a weak base) enhanced the cytosolic alkalinization and aggravated stomatal closure by ABA. The rise in guard cell pH because of ABA became noticeable after 6 min and peaked at 12 min, while NO production started at 9 min and peaked at 18 min. These results suggested that NO production was downstream of the rise in cytosolic pH. The ABA-induced increase in NO of guard cells and stomatal closure was prevented by 2-phenyl-4,4,5,5-tetramethyl imidazoline-1-oxyl 3-oxide (cPTIO, a NO scavenger) and partially by N-nitro-L-Arg-methyl ester (L-NAME, an inhibitor of NO synthase). In contrast, cPTIO or L-NAME had only a marginal effect on the pH rise induced by ABA. Ethylene glycol tetraacetic acid (EGTA, a calcium chelator) prevented ABA-induced stomatal closure while restricting cytosolic pH rise and NO production. We suggest that during ABA-induced stomatal closure, a rise in cytosolic pH is necessary for NO production. Calcium may act upstream of cytosolic alkalinization and NO production, besides its known function as a downstream component.  相似文献   

5.
Pyrabactin, a synthetic agonist of abscisic acid (ABA), inhibits seed germination and hypocotyl growth and stimulates gene expression in a very similar way to ABA, implying the possible modulation of stomatal function by pyrabactin as well. The effect of pyrabactin on stomatal closure and secondary messengers was therefore studied in guard cells of Pisum sativum abaxial epidermis. Pyrabactin caused marked stomatal closure in a pattern similar to ABA. In addition, pyrabactin elevated the levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS), nitric oxide (NO), and cytoplasmic pH levels in guard cells, as indicated by the respective fluorophores. However, apyrabactin, an inactive analogue of ABA, did not affect either stomatal closure or the signalling components of guard cells. The effects of pyrabactin-induced changes were reversed by pharmalogical compounds that modulate ROS, NO or cytoplasmic pH levels, quite similar to ABA effects. Fusicoccin, a fungal toxin, could reverse the stomatal closure caused by pyrabactin, as well as that caused by ABA. Experiments on stomatal closure by varying concentrations of ABA, in the presence of fixed concentration of pyrabactin, and vice versa, revealed that the actions of ABA and pyrabactin were additive. Further kinetic analysis of data revealed that the apparent K(D) of ABA was increased almost 4-fold in the presence of ABA, suggesting that pyrabactin and ABA were competing with each other either at the same site or close to the active site. It is proposed that pyrabactin could be used to examine the ABA-related signal-transduction components in stomatal guard cells as well as in other plant tissues. It is also suggested that pyrabactin can be used as an antitranspirant or as a priming agent for improving the drought tolerance of crop plants.  相似文献   

6.
Commelina guard cells can be rapidly closed by abscisic acid (ABA), and it is thought that this signal is always transduced through increases in cytosolic calcium. However, when Commelina plants were grown at 10 to 17[deg]C, most guard cells failed to exhibit any ABA-induced increase in cytosolic calcium even though all of these cells closed. At growth temperatures of 25[deg]C or above, ABA-induced closure was always associated with an increase in cytosolic calcium. This suggests that there may be two transduction routes for ABA in guard cells; only one involves increases in cytosolic calcium. Activation of either pathway on its own appears to be sufficient to cause closure. Because the rates of ABA accumulation and transport in plants grown at different temperatures are likely to be different, we synthesized and microinjected caged ABA directly into guard cells. ABA was released internally by UV photolysis and subsequently caused stomatal closure. This result suggests a possible intracellular locale for the hypothesized ABA receptor.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of abscisic acid (ABA) on the size of the apertureof stomata on epidermal strips of Vicia faba were studied inincubation media with different pH values. The osmotic potentialof guard cells, as determined by the limiting plasmolysis method,was higher at pH 4.0 than at pH 6.0, although the size of thestomatal apertures was almost identical at both pH values. AtpH 4.0, ABA effectively caused stomatal closure but had onlya small effect on the osmotic potential, whereas, at pH 6.0,ABA significantly increased the osmotic potential. ABA promotedthe efflux of Cl and malate from epidermal strips intothe incubation medium, an effect which was more marked at pH6.0, with a concomitant efflux of K+ to balance the charge onthe exported anions. From these results, it is suggested thatABA may cause an increase in the elastic modulus of the cellwalls of guard cells. 3 Present address: Nagano Prefectural Vegetable and OrnamentalCrops Experimental Station, 2206 Oomuro, Matsusiro-machi, Nagano381-12, Japan (Received September 30, 1986; Accepted January 9, 1987)  相似文献   

8.
The effects of abscisic acid (ABA) on the formation of osmoticallyactive solutes and on cell wall synthesis in guard cells wereexamined using sonicated abaxial epidermal strips of Vicia fabaL. incubated with 14C-glucose at pH 4 and 6. Radioactivity wasincorporated mainly into malate,sucrose, starch and cell-wallfractions. 14C- Glucose uptake by the guard cells was reducedwhen 1 µm ABA was added. Malate formation, which was moreactive at pH 6 than at 4, was inhibited by ABA at pH 6, butnot at pH 4. Conversion of 14C-glucose into 14C-sucrose wasstimulated by ABA at both pH values. Release of radio activesolutes (composed mainly of glucose and malate)from the guardcells into the medium was more active at pH 6 than at pH 4.ABA stimulated there lease at both pH values. Turnover of starchwas more remarkable when the pH value was 6. ABA inhibited thesynthesis of starch, but did not affect its degradation. Cell-wallsynthesis inthe guard cells was also inhibited by ABA, the inhibitionrate being greater at pH 4 than at pH 6.These results suggestthat ABA may have two different actions on stomatal movement:to changethe metabolic activities in the guard cells so as tolower the concentration of osmotically active solutes, and tochange the mechanical properties of cell walls by modulatingcell-wall metabolism. (Received September 7, 1987; Accepted November 30, 1987)  相似文献   

9.
The role of nitric oxide (NO) and the relationship between NO and cytosolic pH during inhibition of ABA effect by fusicoccin (FC) in guard cells of Vicia faba were analyzed. ABA induced NO generation and stomatal closure, but FC inhibited the effects of ABA. Treatment with 2-(4-carboxyphenyl)-4,4,5,5-tetra-methylimidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide (cPTIO) and NG-nitro-L-Arg-methyl ester (L-NAME) mimicked the effects of FC. These data suggest that inhibition of ABA effect by FC is possibly related to the decreasing in the NO level. Furthermore, like cPTIO, FC not only suppressed stomatal closure and NO level in guard cells treated with NO donor sodium nitroprusside (SNP), but also reopened stomata, which had been closed by ABA, and reduced the level of NO in guard cells that had been produced by ABA, indicating that FC caused NO removal. Butyric acid simulated the effects of FC on the stomatal aperture and increased NO levels in guard cells treated with SNP and had been closed by ABA, and both FC and butyric acid surely reduced cytosolic pH, which demonstrates that cytosolic acidification mediates FC-induced NO removal. Taken together, our results show that FC induces NO removal and reduces NO level via cytosolic acidification in guard cells, thus inhibiting ABA effect.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.

Main conclusion

Phyto-S1P and S1P induced stomatal closure in epidermis of pea ( Pisum sativum ) by raising the levels of NO and pH in guard cells. Phosphosphingolipids, such as phytosphingosine-1-phosphate (phyto-S1P) and sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), are important signaling components during drought stress. The biosynthesis of phyto-S1P or S1P is mediated by sphingosine kinases (SPHKs). Although phyto-S1P and S1P are known to be signaling components in higher plants, their ability to induce stomatal closure has been ambiguous. We evaluated in detail the effects of phyto-S1P, S1P and SPHK inhibitors on signaling events leading to stomatal closure in the epidermis of Pisum sativum. Phyto-S1P or S1P induced stomatal closure, along with a marked rise in nitric oxide (NO) and cytoplasmic pH of guard cells, as in case of ABA. Two SPHK inhibitors, DL-threo dihydrosphingosine and N’,N’-dimethylsphingosine, restricted ABA-induced stomatal closure and prevented the increase of NO or pH by ABA. Modulators of NO or pH impaired both stomatal closure and increase in NO or pH by phyto-S1P/S1P. The stomatal closure by phyto-S1P/S1P was mediated by phospholipase D and phosphatidic acid (PA). When present, PA elevated the levels of pH, but not NO of guard cells. Our results demonstrate that stomatal closure induced by phyto-S1P and S1P depends on rise in pH as well as NO of guard cells. A scheme of signaling events initiated by phyto-S1P/S1P, and converging to cause stomatal closure, is proposed.
  相似文献   

12.
Effects of ABA in 'Isolated' Guard Cells of Commelina communis L.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The effects of 2 x 10–3 M ABA on ion fluxes in isolatedguard cells of Commelina communis L. have been studied, using86RbCl and K82Br, in epidermal strips in which all cells otherthan guard cells have been killed by treatment at low pH. Theeffect of ABA on influx is small, if present, and the majoreffect is a marked transient stimulation of the efflux of both86Rb and 82Br at the plasmalemma; there is also an increasein the flux of 82Br from vacuole to cytoplasm. The stimulationis transient, and the cells do not simply become more leaky.The results are not consistent with previous speculations onthe mechanism by which ABA reduces aperture.  相似文献   

13.
Abscisic acid (ABA) integrates the water status of a plant and causes stomatal closure. Physiological mechanisms remain poorly understood, however, because guard cells flanking stomata are small and contain only attomol quantities of ABA. Here, pooled extracts of dissected guard cells of Vicia faba L. were immunoassayed for ABA at sub‐fmol sensitivity. A pulse of water stress was imposed by submerging the roots in a solution of PEG. The water potentials of root and leaf declined during 20 min of water stress but recovered after stress relief. During stress, the ABA concentration in the root apoplast increased, but that in the leaf apoplast remained low. The ABA concentration in the guard‐cell apoplast increased during stress, providing evidence for intra‐leaf ABA redistribution and leaf apoplastic heterogeneity. Subsequently, the ABA concentration of the leaf apoplast increased, consistent with ABA import via the xylem. Throughout, the ABA contents of the guard‐cell apoplast, but not the guard‐cell symplast, were convincingly correlated with stomatal aperture size, identifying an external locus for ABA perception under these conditions. Apparently, ABA accumulates in the guard‐cell apoplast by evaporation from the guard‐cell wall, so the ABA signal in the xylem is amplified maximally at high transpiration rates. Thus, stomata will display apparently higher sensitivity to leaf apoplastic ABA if stomata are widely open in a relatively dry atmosphere.  相似文献   

14.
During drought, the plant hormone abscisic acid (ABA) induces rapid stomatal closure and in turn reduces transpiration. Stomatal closure is accompanied by large ion fluxes across the plasma membrane, carried by K+ and anion channels. We recorded changes in the activity of these channels induced by ABA, for guard cells of intact Vicia faba plants. Guard cells in their natural environment were impaled with double-barrelled electrodes, and ABA was applied via the leaf surface. In 45 out of 85 cells tested, ABA triggered a transient depolarization of the plasma membrane. In these cells, the membrane potential partially recovered in the presence of ABA; however, a full recovery of the membrane potentials was only observed after removal of ABA. Repetitive ABA responses could be evoked in single cells, but the magnitude of the response varied from one hormone application to the other. The transient depolarization correlated with the activation of anion channels, which peaked 5 min after introduction of the stimulus. In guard cells with a moderate increase in plasma membrane conductance (DeltaG < 5 nS), ABA predominantly activated voltage-independent (slow (S)-type) anion channels. During strong responses (DeltaG > 5 nS), however, ABA activated voltage-dependent (rapid (R)-type) in addition to S-type anion channels. We conclude that the combined activation of these two channel types leads to the transient depolarization of guard cells. The nature of this ABA response correlates with the transient extrusion of Cl- from guard cells and a rapid but confined reduction in stomatal aperture.  相似文献   

15.
The dynamics of stomatal opening and closure had to date been ascribed largely to the K(+)-fluxes and cell wall elasticity. Using protoplasts of guard cells of Vicia faba as model system, we document convincing first hand evidence a that lipid phase alterations could regulate ABA-induced closure of stomates and its reversal by umbelliferone. Backed up by the presence of plasmalemma-located ABA-receptor in guard cells, a novel theory could be put forth explaining guard cell opening and closure mediated by hormone induced reconfiguration via a probable lipid-protein lattice modification. The phase reversal of the plasmalemma by umbelliferone is postulated to be through modified hormone receptor complex structure, which is yet to be substantiated.  相似文献   

16.
Abscisic acid (ABA) is a phytohormone that plays a key role as a stress signal, regulating water relations during drought conditions, by inducing stomatal closure. However, to date, no putative ABA receptor(s) has been reported at the protein sequence, gene family, or cellular localization levels. We used biotinylated ABA (bioABA) to characterize the ABA-perception sites in the stomatal guard cells of Vicia faba. Treatment with bioABA induced stomatal closure and shrinkage of guard cell protoplasts (GCPs). The ABA-perception sites were visualized by fluorescence microscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM), using bioABA and fluorescence-labeled avidin. Fluorescent particles were observed in patches on the surface of the GCPs. Fluorescence intensity was quantified by flow cytometry (FCM) as well as by CLSM. Binding of bioABA was inhibited by ABA in a dose-dependent manner. Pre-treatment of GCPs with proteinase K also blocked the binding of bioABA. Binding of bioABA was inhibited by RCA-7a, an ABA analog that induces stomatal closure, but not by RCA-16, which has no effect on stomatal aperture. Another ABA analog, PBI-51, inhibited ABA-induced stomatal closure. This ABA antagonist also inhibited binding of bioABA to the GCPs. These results suggest that ABA is perceived on the plasma membrane of stomatal guard cells, and that the present experimental methods constitute valuable tools for characterizing the nature of the ABA receptor(s) that perceives physiological ABA signals. These imaging studies allow us to demonstrate the spatial distribution of the ABA-perception sites. Visualization of the ABA-perception sites provides new insights into the nature of membrane-associated ABA receptor(s).  相似文献   

17.
Stomata are unique that they sense and respond to several internal and external stimuli, by modulating signaling components in guard cells. The levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS), nitric oxide (NO) and cytosolic calcium (Ca2+) increase significantly during stomatal closure by not only plant hormones [such as abscisic acid (ABA) or methyl jasmonate (MJ)] but also elicitors (such as chitosan). We observed that cytosolic alkalinization preceded the production of ROS as well as NO during ABA induced stomatal closure. We therefore propose that besides ROS and NO, the cytosolic pH is an important secondary messenger during stomatal closure by ABA or MJ. We also noticed that there is either a cross talk or feedback regulation by cytosolic Ca2+ and ROS (mostly H2O2). Further experiments on the interactions between cytosolic pH, ROS, NO and Ca2+ would yield interesting results.Key words: abscisic acid, methyl jasmonate, chitosan, cytosolic pH, reactive oxygen species, H2O2, nitric oxide, cytosolic calcium  相似文献   

18.
Using a computer model written for whole leaves (Slovik et al. 1992, Planta 187, 14–25) we present in this paper calculations of abscisic acid (ABA) redistribution among different leaf tissues and their compartments in relation to stomatal regulation under drought stress. The model calculations are based on experimental data and biophysical laws. They yield the following results and postulates: (i) Under stress, compartmental pH-shifts come about as a consequence of the inhibition of the pH component of proton-motive forces at the plasmalemma. There is a decrease of net proton fluxes by about 8.6 nmol · s–1 · m–2. (ii) Using stress-induced pH-shifts we demonstrate how stress intensities can be quantified on a molecular basis. (iii) As the weak acid ABA is the only phytohormone which behaves in vivo and in vitro ideally according to the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation, pH-shifts induce a complicated redistribution amongst compartments in the model leaf. (iv) The final accumulation of ABA in guard-cell walls is intensive: up to 16.1-fold compared with only up to 3.4-fold in the guard-cell cytosol. We propose that the binding site of the guard-cell ABA receptor faces the apoplasm. (v) A twoto three-fold ABA accumulation in guard-cell walls is sufficient to induce closure of stomata. (vi) The minimum time lag until stomata start to close is 1–5 min; it depends on the stress intensity and on the guard-cell sensitivity to ABA: the more moderate the stress is, the later stomata start to close or they do not close at all. (vii) In the short term, there is almost no influence of the velocity of pH-shifts on the velocity of the ABA redistribution, (viii) Six hours after the termination of stress there is still an ABA concentration 1.4-fold the initial level in the guard-cell cytosol (delay of ABA relaxation, aftereffect), (ix) The observed induction of net ABA synthesis after onset of stress may be explained by a decrease in cytosolic ABA degradation. About 1 h after onset of stress the model leaf would start to synthesise ABA (and its conjugates) automatically, (x) This ABA net synthesis serves to inform roots via an increased ABA concentration in the phloem sap. The stress-induced ABA redistribution is per se not sufficient to feed the ploem sap with ABA. (xi) The primary target membrane of stress is the plasmalemma, not thylakoids. (xii) The effective stress sensor, which induces the proposed signal chain finally leading to stomatal closure, is located in epidermal cells. Mesophyll cells are not capable of creating a significant ABA signal to guard cells if the epidermal plasmalemma conductance to undissociated molecular species of ABA (HABA) is indeed higher than the plasmalemma conductance of the mesophyll (plasmodesmata open), (xiii) All model conclusions which can be compared with independent experimental data quantitatively fit to them. We conclude that the basic experimental data of the model are consistent. A stress-induced ABA redistribution in the leaf lamina elicits stomatal closure.Abbreviations ABA abscisic acid - CON vacuolar ABA conjugates We are grateful to Prof. U. Heber (Lehrstuhl Botanik I, University of Würzburg, FRG) for stimulating discussions. This work has been performed within the research program of the Sonderforschungsbereich 251 (TP 3 and 4) of the University of Würzburg. It has been also supported by the Fonds der Chemischen Industrie.  相似文献   

19.
In this study, we examined the involvement of endogenous abscisic acid (ABA) in methyl jasmonate (MeJA)-induced stomatal closure using an inhibitor of ABA biosynthesis, fluridon (FLU), and an ABA-deficient Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) mutant, aba2-2. We found that pretreatment with FLU inhibited MeJA-induced stomatal closure but not ABA-induced stomatal closure in wild-type plants. The aba2-2 mutation impaired MeJA-induced stomatal closure but not ABA-induced stomatal closure. We also investigated the effects of FLU and the aba2-2 mutation on cytosolic free calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](cyt)) in guard cells using a Ca(2+)-reporter fluorescent protein, Yellow Cameleon 3.6. In wild-type guard cells, FLU inhibited MeJA-induced [Ca(2+)](cyt) elevation but not ABA-induced [Ca(2+)](cyt) elevation. The aba2-2 mutation did not affect ABA-elicited [Ca(2+)](cyt) elevation but suppressed MeJA-induced [Ca(2+)](cyt) elevation. We also tested the effects of the aba2-2 mutation and FLU on the expression of MeJA-inducible VEGETATIVE STORAGE PROTEIN1 (VSP1). In the aba2-2 mutant, MeJA did not induce VSP1 expression. In wild-type leaves, FLU inhibited MeJA-induced VSP1 expression. Pretreatment with ABA at 0.1 μm, which is not enough concentration to evoke ABA responses in the wild type, rescued the observed phenotypes of the aba2-2 mutant. Finally, we found that in wild-type leaves, MeJA stimulates the expression of 9-CIS-EPOXYCAROTENOID DIOXYGENASE3, which encodes a crucial enzyme in ABA biosynthesis. These results suggest that endogenous ABA could be involved in MeJA signal transduction and lead to stomatal closure in Arabidopsis guard cells.  相似文献   

20.
Zhang X  Zhang L  Dong F  Gao J  Galbraith DW  Song CP 《Plant physiology》2001,126(4):1438-1448
One of the most important functions of the plant hormone abscisic acid (ABA) is to induce stomatal closure by reducing the turgor of guard cells under water deficit. Under environmental stresses, hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)), an active oxygen species, is widely generated in many biological systems. Here, using an epidermal strip bioassay and laser-scanning confocal microscopy, we provide evidence that H(2)O(2) may function as an intermediate in ABA signaling in Vicia faba guard cells. H(2)O(2) inhibited induced closure of stomata, and this effect was reversed by ascorbic acid at concentrations lower than 10(-5) M. Further, ABA-induced stomatal closure also was abolished partly by addition of exogenous catalase (CAT) and diphenylene iodonium (DPI), which are an H(2)O(2) scavenger and an NADPH oxidase inhibitor, respectively. Time course experiments of single-cell assays based on the fluorescent probe dichlorofluorescein showed that the generation of H(2)O(2) was dependent on ABA concentration and an increase in the fluorescence intensity of the chloroplast occurred significantly earlier than within the other regions of guard cells. The ABA-induced change in fluorescence intensity in guard cells was abolished by the application of CAT and DPI. In addition, ABA microinjected into guard cells markedly induced H(2)O(2) production, which preceded stomatal closure. These effects were abolished by CAT or DPI micro-injection. Our results suggest that guard cells treated with ABA may close the stomata via a pathway with H(2)O(2) production involved, and H(2)O(2) may be an intermediate in ABA signaling.  相似文献   

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