Reversible calcium-regulated stopcocks in legume sieve tubes.
Journal: 2001/August - Plant Cell
ISSN: 1040-4651
PUBMED: 11340193
Abstract:
Sieve tubes of legumes (Fabaceae) contain characteristic P-protein crystalloids with controversial function. We studied their behavior by conventional light, electron, and confocal laser scanning microscopy. In situ, crystalloids are able to undergo rapid (<1 sec) and reversible conversions from the condensed resting state into a dispersed state, in which they occlude the sieve tubes. Crystalloid dispersal is triggered by plasma membrane leakage induced by mechanical injury or permeabilizing substances. Similarly, abrupt turgor changes imposed by osmotic shock cause crystalloid dispersal. Because chelators generally prevent the response, divalent cations appear to be the decisive factor in crystalloid expansion. Cycling between dispersal and condensation can be induced in opened cells by repetitive exchange of bathing media containing either Ca(2)+ or chelators. Sr(2)+ and Ba(2)+, but not Mg(2)+, are equally active. In conclusion, the fabacean P-protein crystalloids represent a novel class of mechanically active proteinaceous structures, which provide an efficient mechanism with which to control sieve tube conductivity.
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Plant Cell 13(5): 1221-1230

Reversible Calcium-Regulated Stopcocks in Legume Sieve Tubes<sup><a href="#fn1" rid="fn1" class=" fn">W⃞</a></sup>

Institut für Allgemeine Botanik und Pflanzenphysiologie, Justus-Liebig-Universität, Senckenbergstrasse 17-21, D-35390 Giessen, Germany
AK Kinematische Zellforschung, Biozentrum der Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Marie-Curie-Strasse 9, D-60439 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail ed.nesseig-inu.oib.1tob@hcualbonk.leahcim; fax 49-641-99-35119
Received 2000 Dec 21; Accepted 2001 Mar 20.

Abstract

Sieve tubes of legumes (Fabaceae) contain characteristic P-protein crystalloids with controversial function. We studied their behavior by conventional light, electron, and confocal laser scanning microscopy. In situ, crystalloids are able to undergo rapid (<1 sec) and reversible conversions from the condensed resting state into a dispersed state, in which they occlude the sieve tubes. Crystalloid dispersal is triggered by plasma membrane leakage induced by mechanical injury or permeabilizing substances. Similarly, abrupt turgor changes imposed by osmotic shock cause crystalloid dispersal. Because chelators generally prevent the response, divalent cations appear to be the decisive factor in crystalloid expansion. Cycling between dispersal and condensation can be induced in opened cells by repetitive exchange of bathing media containing either Ca or chelators. Sr and Ba, but not Mg, are equally active. In conclusion, the fabacean P-protein crystalloids represent a novel class of mechanically active proteinaceous structures, which provide an efficient mechanism with which to control sieve tube conductivity.

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Acknowledgments

Helpful suggestions and comments given during the course of this study by Hubert Felle and Gerhard Thiel are gratefully acknowledged. We thank Jürgen Bereiter-Hahn, Julian Hibberd, and Gerhard Thiel for critical discussion of earlier versions of the manuscript.

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