Control of volume and turgor in stomatal guard cells

被引:48
作者
MacRobbie, Enid A. C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cambridge, Dept Plant Sci, Cambridge CB2 3EA, England
关键词
aquaporin; guard cell; osmoregulation; turgor regulation; tonoplast ion channels;
D O I
10.1007/s00232-005-0851-7
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Water loss from plants is determined by the aperture of stomatal pores in the leaf epidermis, set by the level of vacuolar accumulation of potassium salt, and hence volume and turgor, of a pair of guard cells. Regulation of ion fluxes across the tonoplast, the key to regulation of stomatal aperture, can only be studied by tracer flux measurements. There are two transport systems in the tonoplast. The first is a Ca2+-activated channel, inhibited by phenylarsine oxide (PAO), responsible for the release of vacuolar K+(Rb+) in response to the "drought" hormone, abscisic acid (ABA). This channel is sensitive to pressure, down-regulated at low turgor and up-regulated at high turgor, providing a system for turgor regulation. ABA induces a transient stimulation of vacuolar ion efflux, during which the flux tracks the ion content (volume, turgor), suggesting ABA reduces the set-point of a control system. The second system, which is PAO-insensitive, is responsible for an ion flux from vacuole to cytoplasm associated with inward water flow following a hypo-osmotic transfer. It is suggested that this involves an aquaporin as sensor, and perhaps also as responder; deformation of the aquaporin may render it ion-permeable, or, alternatively, the deformed aquaporin may signal to an associated ion channel, activating it. Treatment with inhibitors of aquaporins, HgCl2 or silver sulfadiazine, produces a large transient increase in Ion release from the vacuole, also PAO-insensitive. It is suggested that this involves the same aquaporin, either rendered directly ion-permeable, or signalling to activate an associated ion channel.
引用
收藏
页码:131 / 142
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   Antibodies to the CFTR modulate the turgor pressure of guard cell protoplasts via slow anion channels [J].
Leonhardt, N ;
Bazin, I ;
Richaud, P ;
Marin, E ;
Vavasseur, A ;
Forestier, C .
FEBS LETTERS, 2001, 494 (1-2) :15-18
[32]   A simple method for in situ hybridization to RNA in guard cells of Vicia faba L.:: The expression of aquaporins in guard cells [J].
Sun, MH ;
Xu, W ;
Zhu, YF ;
Su, WA ;
Tang, ZC .
PLANT MOLECULAR BIOLOGY REPORTER, 2001, 19 (02) :129-135
[33]   Cytokinin- and auxin-induced stomatal opening involves a decrease in levels of hydrogen peroxide in guard cells of Vicia faba [J].
Song, Xi-Gui ;
She, Xiao-Ping ;
He, Jun-Min ;
Huang, Chen ;
Song, Tu-Sheng .
FUNCTIONAL PLANT BIOLOGY, 2006, 33 (06) :573-583
[34]   Inhibition of darkness-induced stomatal closure by ethylene involves a removal of hydrogen peroxide from guard cells of Vicia faba [J].
Song, X. G. ;
She, X. P. ;
Wang, J. .
RUSSIAN JOURNAL OF PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2012, 59 (03) :372-380
[35]   Inhibition of darkness-induced stomatal closure by ethylene involves a removal of hydrogen peroxide from guard cells of Vicia faba [J].
X. G. Song ;
X. P. She ;
J. Wang .
Russian Journal of Plant Physiology, 2012, 59 :372-380
[36]   A simple method forIn Situ hybridization to RNA in guard cells ofVicia Faba L.: The expression of aquaporins in guard cells [J].
Mei-Hao Sun ;
Wen Xu ;
Ya-Fang Zhu ;
Wei-Ai Su ;
Zhang-Cheng Tang .
Plant Molecular Biology Reporter, 2001, 19 :129-135
[37]   Ethylene inhibits abscisic acid-induced stomatal closure in Vicia faba via reducing nitric oxide levels in guard cells [J].
She, XiaoPing ;
Song, XiGui .
NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2012, 50 (02) :203-216
[38]   The K+ channel KZM2 is involved in stomatal movement by modulating inward K+ currents in maize guard cells [J].
Gao, Yong-Qiang ;
Wu, Wei-Hua ;
Wang, Yi .
PLANT JOURNAL, 2017, 92 (04) :662-675
[39]   Osmotic effects on vacuolar ion release in guard cells [J].
MacRobbie, EAC .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2006, 103 (04) :1135-1140
[40]   A Guard Cell Abscisic Acid (ABA) Network Model That Captures the Stomatal Resting State [J].
Maheshwari, Parul ;
Assmann, Sarah M. ;
Albert, Reka .
FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY, 2020, 11