Abstract

The amino acids glutamate (Glu) and glycine (Gly) trigger large, rapid rises in cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration and a concomitant rise in membrane potential (depolarization) in plants. The possibility that plant homologs of neuronal ionotropic glutamate receptors mediate these neuron-like ionic responses was tested in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seedlings using a combination of Ca(2+) measurements, electrophysiology, and reverse genetics. The membrane depolarization triggered by Glu was greatly reduced or completely blocked in some conditions by mutations in GLR3.3, one of the 20 GLR genes in Arabidopsis. The same mutations completely blocked the associated rise in cytosolic Ca(2+). These results genetically demonstrate the participation of a glutamate receptor in the rapid ionic responses to an amino acid. The GLR3.3-independent component of the depolarization required Glu concentrations above 25 mum, did not display desensitization, and was strongly suppressed by increasing extracellular pH. It is suggested to result from H(+)-amino acid symport. Six amino acids commonly present in soils (Glu, Gly, alanine, serine, asparagine, and cysteine) as well as the tripeptide glutathione (gamma-glutamyl-cysteinyl-Gly) were found to be strong agonists of the GLR3.3-mediated responses. All other amino acids induced a small depolarization similar to the non-GLR, putative symporter component and in most cases evoked little or no Ca(2+) rise. From these results it may be concluded that sensing of six amino acids in the rhizosphere and perhaps extracellular peptides is coupled to Ca(2+) signaling through a GLR-dependent mechanism homologous to a fundamental component of neuronal signaling.

Highlights

  • The amino acids glutamate (Glu) and glycine (Gly) trigger large, rapid rises in cytosolic Ca21 concentration and a concomitant rise in membrane potential in plants

  • Calcium transients may result from Ca21 influx across the plasma membrane and/or Ca21 release to the cytoplasm from internal stores

  • Glu-induced membrane depolarizations in leaf mesophyll cells display desensitization (Meyerhoff et al, 2005), consistent with the possibility that ligand-gated channels are responsible for the electrical effects of amino acids

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Summary

Introduction

The amino acids glutamate (Glu) and glycine (Gly) trigger large, rapid rises in cytosolic Ca21 concentration and a concomitant rise in membrane potential (depolarization) in plants. The same mutations completely blocked the associated rise in cytosolic Ca21 These results genetically demonstrate the participation of a glutamate receptor in the rapid ionic responses to an amino acid. All other amino acids induced a small depolarization similar to the non-GLR, putative symporter component and in most cases evoked little or no Ca21 rise. From these results it may be concluded that sensing of six amino acids in the rhizosphere and perhaps extracellular peptides is coupled to Ca21 signaling through a GLR-dependent mechanism homologous to a fundamental component of neuronal signaling. The present research addresses the function of plant GLR molecules with a combination of reverse genetic and cell physiological techniques

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