Abstract
The spacing between adjacent hairs in vegetative whorls ofAcetabularia acetabulum (formerlyA. mediterranea) was earlier reported as being quantitatively responsive to calcium ion concentration in the culture medium. We here report a quantitative response to the concentration of the calcium-chelator EGTA, in the opposite sense to the effect of calcium. (Increasing [Ca2+] diminishes the spacing; increasing [EGTA] increases it.) The earlier work was interpreted in terms of control of the spacing by a putative reaction-diffusion mechanism in the cell membrane, in which a receptor R was activated by calcium-binding to initiate the process. We extend this interpretation by treating CaEGTA as an uncompetitive inhibitor of the effect of calcium on R. This leads to thermodynamic constants for CaEGTA binding to the CaR complex: ΔH 298 0 =−250 ± 60 kJ/mol; ΔS 298 0 =−820 ± 200 J/mol · K. Consistency of the concentration and temperature dependences reported here with the postulated dynamic mechanism increases the probability that this mechanism is correct.
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