MacRobbie E A
Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 1998 Sep 29;353(1374):1475-88. doi: 10.1098/rstb.1998.0303.
Our understanding of the signalling mechanisms involved in the process of stomatal closure is reviewed. Work has concentrated on the mechanisms by which abscisic acid (ABA) induces changes in specific ion channels at both the plasmalemma and the tonoplast, leading to efflux of both K+ and anions at both membranes, requiring four essential changes. For each we need to identify the specific channels concerned, and the detailed signalling chains by which each is linked through signalling intermediates to ABA. There are two global changes that are identified following ABA treatment: an increase in cytoplasmic pH and an increase in cytoplasmic Ca2+, although stomata can close without any measurable global increase in cytoplasmic Ca2+. There is also evidence for the importance of several protein phosphatases and protein kinases in the regulation of channel activity. At the plasmalemma, loss of K+ requires depolarization of the membrane potential into the range at which the outward K+ channel is open. ABA-induced activation of a non-specific cation channel, permeable to Ca2+, may contribute to the necessary depolarization, together with ABA-induced activation of S-type anion channels in the plasmalemma, which are then responsible for the necessary anion efflux. The anion channels are activated by Ca2+ and by phosphorylation, but the precise mechanism of their activation by ABA is not yet clear. ABA also up-regulates the outward K+ current at any given membrane potential; this activation is Ca(2+)-independent and is attributed to the increase in cytoplasmic pH, perhaps through the marked pH-sensitivity of protein phosphatase type 2C. Our understanding of mechanisms at the tonoplast is much less complete. A total of two channels, both Ca(2+)-activated, have been identified which are capable of K+ efflux; these are the voltage-independent VK channel specific to K+, and the slow vacuolar (SV) channel which opens only at non-physiological tonoplast potentials (cytoplasm positive). The SV channel is permeable to K+ and Ca2+, and although it has been argued that it could be responsible for Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release, it now seems likely that it opens only under conditions where Ca2+ will flow from cytoplasm to vacuole. Although tracer measurements show unequivocally that ABA does activate efflux of Cl- from vacuole to cytoplasm, no vacuolar anion channel has yet been identified. There is clear evidence that ABA activates release of Ca2+ from internal stores, but the source and trigger for ABA-induced increase in cytoplasmic Ca2+ are uncertain. The tonoplast and another membrane, probably ER, have IP3-sensitive Ca2+ release channels, and the tonoplast has also cADPR-activated Ca2+ channels. Their relative contributions to ABA-induced release of Ca2+ from internal stores remain to be established. There is some evidence for activation of phospholipase C by ABA, by an unknown mechanism; plant phospholipase C may be activated by Ca2+ rather than by the G-proteins used in many animal cell signalling systems. A further ABA-induced channel modulation is the inhibition of the inward K+ channel, which is not essential for closing but will prevent opening. It is suggested that this is mediated through the Ca(2+)-activated protein phosphatase, calcineurin. The question of Ca(2+)-independent stomatal closure remains controversial. At the plasmalemma the stimulation of K+ efflux is Ca(2+)-independent and, at least in Arabidopsis, activation of anion efflux by ABA may also be Ca(2+)-independent. But there are no indications of Ca(2+)-independent mechanisms for K+ efflux at the tonoplast, and the appropriate anion channel at the tonoplast is still to be found. There is also evidence that ABA interferes with a control system in the guard cell, resetting its set-point to lower contents, suggesting that stretch-activated channels also feature in the regulation of guard cell ion channels, perhaps through interactions with cytoskeletal proteins. (ABSTRACT TRUN
本文综述了我们对气孔关闭过程中涉及的信号传导机制的理解。研究工作主要集中在脱落酸(ABA)诱导质膜和液泡膜上特定离子通道变化的机制上,这导致钾离子(K⁺)和阴离子在这两种膜上外流,这一过程需要四个关键变化。对于每一个变化,我们都需要确定相关的特定通道,以及每个通道通过信号中间体与ABA相连的详细信号传导链。ABA处理后可识别出两个整体变化:细胞质pH值升高和细胞质Ca²⁺浓度增加,尽管气孔可以在细胞质Ca²⁺没有任何可测量的整体增加的情况下关闭。也有证据表明几种蛋白磷酸酶和蛋白激酶在通道活性调节中具有重要作用。在质膜上,K⁺的外流需要膜电位去极化到向外K⁺通道开放的范围内。ABA诱导的对Ca²⁺通透的非特异性阳离子通道的激活,可能有助于必要的去极化,同时ABA诱导质膜上S型阴离子通道的激活,随后这些通道负责必要的阴离子外流。阴离子通道由Ca²⁺和磷酸化激活,但ABA激活它们的确切机制尚不清楚。ABA还在任何给定的膜电位下上调向外的K⁺电流;这种激活不依赖于Ca²⁺,并且归因于细胞质pH值的升高,可能是通过2C型蛋白磷酸酶对pH的显著敏感性。我们对液泡膜机制的理解还很不完整。总共已鉴定出两个均由Ca²⁺激活的能够使K⁺外流的通道;它们是对K⁺特异的电压非依赖性VK通道,以及仅在非生理液泡膜电位(细胞质为正)下开放的慢液泡(SV)通道。SV通道对K⁺和Ca²⁺通透,尽管有人认为它可能负责Ca²⁺诱导的Ca²⁺释放,但现在看来它仅在Ca²⁺将从细胞质流向液泡的条件下开放。尽管示踪测量明确表明ABA确实激活了Cl⁻从液泡到细胞质的外流,但尚未鉴定出液泡阴离子通道。有明确证据表明ABA激活了内部储存库中Ca²⁺的释放,但ABA诱导的细胞质Ca²⁺增加的来源和触发因素尚不确定。液泡膜和另一种膜(可能是内质网)具有肌醇三磷酸(IP3)敏感的Ca²⁺释放通道,并且液泡膜还具有环ADP核糖(cADPR)激活的Ca²⁺通道。它们对ABA诱导的内部储存库中Ca²⁺释放的相对贡献仍有待确定。有一些证据表明ABA通过未知机制激活磷脂酶C;植物磷脂酶C可能由Ca²⁺激活,而不是由许多动物细胞信号系统中使用的G蛋白激活。ABA诱导的另一种通道调节是内向K⁺通道的抑制,这对关闭不是必需的,但会阻止开放。有人认为这是通过Ca²⁺激活的蛋白磷酸酶钙调神经磷酸酶介导的。不依赖于Ca²⁺的气孔关闭问题仍然存在争议。在质膜上,K⁺外流的刺激不依赖于Ca²⁺,并且至少在拟南芥中ABA对阴离子外流的激活也可能不依赖于Ca²⁺。但是没有迹象表明在液泡膜上存在不依赖于Ca²⁺的K⁺外流机制,并且液泡膜上合适的阴离子通道仍有待发现。也有证据表明ABA干扰保卫细胞中的控制系统,将其设定点重置为更低的含量,这表明牵张激活通道可能也参与保卫细胞离子通道的调节,可能是通过与细胞骨架蛋白的相互作用。(摘要截断)