Abstract

Pollen tubes grow by spatially and temporally regulated expansion of new material secreted into the cell wall at the tip of the tube. A complex web of interactions among cellular components, ions and small molecule provides dynamic control of localized expansion and secretion. Cross-correlation studies on oscillating lily (Lilium formosanum Wallace) pollen tubes showed that an increase in intracellular calcium follows an increase in growth, whereas the increase in the alkaline band and in secretion both anticipate the increase in growth rate. Calcium, as a follower, is unlikely to be a stimulator of growth, whereas the alkaline band, as a leader, may be an activator. To gain further insight herein we reversibly inhibited growth with potassium cyanide (KCN) and followed the re-establishment of calcium, pH and secretion patterns as growth resumed. While KCN markedly slows growth and causes the associated gradients of calcium and pH to sharply decline, its removal allows growth and vital processes to fully recover. The calcium gradient reappears before growth restarts; however, it is preceded by both the alkaline band and secretion, in which the alkaline band is slightly advanced over secretion. Thus the pH gradient, rather than the tip-focused calcium gradient, may regulate pollen tube growth.

Highlights

  • Calcium ions are essential for pollen tube growth [1,2]

  • Having established a base line of activity, the lily pollen tube growth medium (LPGM) was exchanged for one that consists of LPGM plus

  • We found that propidium iodide (PI) competes with calcium in binding to acidic pectins [11]

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Summary

Introduction

Calcium is involved with a myriad of processes within the cytoplasm where a important role may be the stimulation of secretion [4,5]. It is a paradigm in both plant and animal cell biology that elevated levels of calcium stimulate secretion. Cross-correlation studies of oscillating pollen tube growth demonstrate that the increase in the intracellular calcium gradient lags the increase in growth rate by +10◦ to +40◦ [9,10]. Secretion, measured using propidium iodide (PI), a fluorescent dye that competes for calcium in binding to acidic pectins in the cell wall [11], anticipates growth by

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