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Permeation of Ca2+ through K+ channels in the plasma membrane of Vicia faba guard cells
Authors:K. A. Fairley-Grenot  S. M. Assmann
Affiliation:(1) Harvard Biological Laboratories, 02138 Cambridge, Massachusetts;(2) Present address: Department of Biophysics, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Sydney, 2006 NSW, Australia
Abstract:Summary The whole-cell patch-clamp method has been used to measure Ca2+ influx through otherwise K+-selective channels in the plasma membrane surrounding protoplasts from guard cells of Vicia faba. These channels are activated by membrane hyperpolarization. The resulting K+ influx contributes to the increase in guard cell turgor which causes stomatal opening during the regulation of leaf-air gas exchange. We find that after opening the K+ channels by hyperpolarization, depolarization of the membrane results in tail current at voltages where there is no electrochemical force to drive K+ inward through the channels. Tail current remains when the reversal potential for permeant ions other than Ca2+ is more negative than or equal to the K+ equilibrium potential (–47 mV), indicating that the current is due to Ca2+ influx through the K+ channels prior to their closure. Decreasing internal [Ca2+] (Cai) from 200 to 2 nm or increasing the external [Ca2+] (Cao) from 1 to 10 mm increases the amplitude of tail current and shifts the observed reversal potential to more positive values. Such increases in the electrochemical force driving Ca2+ influx also decrease the amplitude of time-activated current, indicating that Ca2+ permeation is slower than K+ permeation, and so causes a partial block. Increasing Cao also (i) causes a positive shift in the voltage dependence of current, presumably by decreasing the membrane surface potential, and (ii) results in a U-shaped current-voltage relationship with peak inward current ca. –160 mV, indicating that the Ca2– block is voltage dependent and suggesting that the cation binding site is within the electric field of the membrane. K+ channels in Zea mays guard cells also appear to have a Cai-, and Cao-dependent ability to mediate Ca2+ influx. We suggest that the inwardly rectiying K+ channels are part of a regulatory mechanism for Cai. Changes in Caoand (associated) changes in Cai regulate a variety of intracellular processes and ion fluxes, including the K+ and anion fluxes associated with stomatal aperture change.This work was supported by grants to S.M.A. from NSF (DCB-8904041) and from the McKnight Foundation. K.F.-G. is a Charles Gilbert Heydon Travelling Fellow. The authors thank Dr. R. MacKinnon (Harvard Medical School) and two anonymous reviewers for helpful comments.
Keywords:K+ channel  Ca2+ channel  selectivity  permeation  plant  Vicia faba
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