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J. theor. Biol. (1983) 103, 645-648 LETTER TO THE EDITOR The Evolution of Plant Action Potentials Electrical signals which resemble nerve impulses are widespread in plants at all levels of evolution from the Algae to the Angiosperms, and have been well reviewed (Pickard, 1973; Sibaoka, 1966,1969). They are caused by the depolarization of cellular membrane potentials and like nerve impulses, propagate along the cell membrane. Sometimes they can be transmitted from cell to cell for long distances via the plasmodesmata. In several higher plants they have a proven function in communication, for example, they transmit information about the arrival of prey in the insectivorous plants of the Droseraceae, they trigger the movement of floral parts to assist insect pollination in several other plants, and they control the seismonastic movements of Mimosa pudica. However, action potentials which have no obvious nervous function can also be found, for example, periodic depolarizations of unicells such as Acetabufaria have been observed (Norvac & Bentrup, 1972). Also in higher plants there is often considerable spontaneous electrical activity resembling action potentials which can be detected by electrodes placed on the plant surface. These signals are thought to be due to the depolarization of individual cells within the plant body detected electrotronically at the plant surface. They do not seem to show true propagation far (if at all) beyond their cell or origin (Pickard, 1973). It seems likely, therefore, that these signals have no function in long-distance communication. If action potentials which have no function in communication are widespread, even in the lower organisms, it is reasonable to suppose that they arose for some other purpose and that their role in communication has been secondarily acquired. What then is their primary function? A possible answer to this question comes from the study of cell membranes and their associated membrane potentials. Membrane potentials are virtually ubiquitous in both the animal and plant kingdoms, with the insides of cells being typically about 100 mV negative to the outside. These potentials are maintained by the activity of various electrogenic ion pumps (Higinbotham, 1973) and, amongst other things, they provide the energy for the active transport of many substances across the membrane (see Baker, 1978 for a review). If membrane potentials perform such important vital functions, 0022-5193/83/160645+04$03.00/0 @ 1983 Academic Press Inc. (London) Ltd. 646 A. GOLDSWORTHY why do cells not involved in nervous conduction periodically depolarize themselves by exhibiting action potentials? A possible answer is that the first action potentials evolved as a response to injury to enable the cell membrane to be repaired. It would seem very likely that membranes which have been damaged must be depolarized before they can be repaired. A typical potential of 100 mV produces a voltage gradient of 10’ volts per metre across a 10 nm thick membrane. Were such a gradient to occur in air it would cause a lightning discharge! When it occurs across a hole in the membrane, it would be expected to cause such a rapid flux of ions through the breach that repair could well be impossible. The action potential may have arisen in evolution as a mechanism for rapidly switching off the cells membrane potential while the damaged membrane was being repaired, the signal for it to occur being the partial depolarization brought about by ions leaking through the injured region. It is well established that plant action potentials can be induced by both injury and artificial depolarization. As in animals, the plant action potential is caused by the opening of voltage-sensitive ion channels in the membrane in response to a localized depolarization. This depolarizes the membrane further, and causes even more ion channels to open in neighbouring regions of the membrane so that a wave of depolarization spreads over the cell surface. The ion channels are programmed to close after an interval so that the original membrane potential can be restored. I would suggest that the period of depolarization is that necessary to conduct an average repair. If the repair is not completed in this time and the cell remains partially depolarized in the damaged region, a further action potential is innitiated after a short refractory period, and the whole process may be repeated many times. In practice a whole series of action potentials can be seen to propagate from the site of a massive injury to a plant (see Pickard, 1973). This hypothesis explains why spontaneous action potentials are widespread in plant tissues where they do not appear to propagate beyond the cell of origin and have no known nervous function. It also explain why these signals tend to originate in growing regions of the cell (Norvac & Bentrup, 1972), where movements of the expanding cell wall are likely to cause localized tearing of the plasmalemma. The observation that turgor changes after watering plants which have wilted induce action potentials is also consistant with this hypothesis, since this too is likely to produce relative movement between the cell wall and the plasmalemma. If we accept this hypothesis for the evolutionary origin of action potentials, it is relatively easy to see how they could have evolved further as a means of communication. Although their primary function may have been LETTER TO THE EDITOR 647 to depolarize the membrane prior to repair, action potentials propagating rapidly from a site of injury would also serve as a useful signal that injury had occurred, and their number and frequency would indicate the severity of the injury. It would not be surprising if natural selection then occurred to produce appropriate injury responses which were controlled by the receipt of such action potentials. The cessation of protoplasmic streaming which accompanies an action potential down an internodal cell of Nitella (Sibaoka, 1966) is perhaps an example of this in plants. With the arrival of complex multicellular plants, it became possible, although not mandatory, to transmit action potentials from cell to cell via the plasmodesmata. These appear to have many of the characteristics of electrotonic synapses, transmitting the signal only under certain circumstances (Sibaoka, 1966). This would then permit a rapid response by a large area of the plant to a localised injury. Although most of the “spontaneous” action potentials in plants do not propagate far, if at all, beyond their cell of origin, action potentials following massive injury, such as the burning of a leaf can be detected propagating for long distances through the phloem of many plants. One might argue that this is due to injury to the conducting cells and the very open nature of cellular communication at the sieve plates to give a conducting pathway analogous to a nerve axon. However, in most cases, there is no obvious response in higher plants to the receipt of an action potential, although changes at the biochemical level cannot yet be ruled out. Although propagating action potentials and the infrastructure to support them are widespread in plants, it is only in those plants which respond by showing rapid movements that we have definite proof of their function in communication. Plants which show rapid movements in response to action potentials have arisen independently at many diverse points in evolution, raging from the insectivorous plants of the Droseraceae, through Mimosa in the Leguminosae to the motile stamens of the barberry. These plants initiate their action potentials in response to touch rather than injury, but the mechanism could still be very similar. All that is needed is for certain cells of the plant to be hypersensitive so that permeability to ions is increased by relatively minor mechanical deformation. Such cells occur just below the tentacle head in Drosera and at the base of the trigger hairs in Dionaea. They respond to mechanical stress as if they had been injured. They first become depolarized, generating the so-called receptor potential which triggers action potentials which propagate through the neighbouring cells to the motor regions. Little is known of the trouch transducing process, and it is not yet possible to say whether the receptor potential and its consequent action potentials are as a result of a genuine membrane injury or to some 648 A. GOLDSWORTHY more sophisticated mechanism. However, whatever the present mechanism, it is reasonable to suppose that it may have evolved from something simple, like a hypersensitivity to injury. We may therefore conclude that while most plants have little need of a nervous system as sophisticated as that of higher animals, at least some of them have a system comparable with that of the lower forms of animal life. The use of action potentials may be a case of parallel evolution from a membrane repair mechanism in a common ancestor. Department of Pure and Applied Imperial College, London SW7 2BB Biology, (Received 22 September 1982) REFERENCES BAKER, D. A. (1978). New Phyrol. 81,485. HIGINBOTHAM. M. (1973). A. Rev. Plant. Phvsiol. 24.25. NORVAC, B. & BENTRUP; F. W. (1972). Plaita 108,i27. PICKARD, B. G. (1973). Bot. Rev. 39, 172. SIBAOKA, T. (1966). Symp. Sot. exp. Biol. 20,49. SIBAOKA, T. (1969). A. Rev. Plant Physiol. 20, 165. A. GOLDSWORTHY