Elicitor-activated phospholipase A(2) generates lysophosphatidylcholines that mobilize the vacuolar H(+) pool for pH signaling via the activation of Na(+)-dependent proton fluxes |
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Authors: | Viehweger Katrin Dordschbal Batsuch Roos Werner |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Pharmaceutical Biology, Department of Cell Physiology, Martin-Luther-University, 06120 Halle, Germany. |
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Abstract: | The elicitation of phytoalexin biosynthesis in cultured cells of California poppy involves a shift of cytoplasmic pH via the transient efflux of vacuolar protons. Intracellular effectors of vacuolar proton transport were identified by a novel in situ approach based on the selective permeabilization of the plasma membrane for molecules of < or = 10 kD. Subsequent fluorescence imaging of the vacuolar pH correctly reported experimental changes of activity of the tonoplast proton transporters. Lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) caused a transient increase of the vacuolar pH by increasing the Na(+) sensitivity of a Na(+)-dependent proton efflux that was inhibited by amiloride. In intact cells, yeast elicitor activated phospholipase A(2), as demonstrated by the formation of LPC from fluorescent substrate analogs, and caused a transient increase of endogenous LPC, as determined by matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry. It is suggested that LPC generated by phospholipase A(2) at the plasma membrane transduces the elicitor-triggered signal into the activation of a tonoplast H(+)/Na(+) antiporter. |
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