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Journal of Cell Science 106, 453-462 (1993) Printed in Great Britain © The Company of Biologists Limited 1993 453 COMMENTARY Calcium homeostasis in plants Simon Gilroy, Paul C. Bethke and Russell L. Jones* Department of Plant Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA *Author for correspondence INTRODUCTION Many aspects of Ca2+ homeostasis in plants are similar to those in animals and fungi (Poovaiah and Reddy, 1989), but an understanding of how Ca2+ transport and function are integrated from the level of the whole plant to the subcellular level remains elusive. At the whole-plant level, a constant supply of Ca2+ in the range 1-10 mM is required to maintain normal growth and development (Epstein, 1972; Clarkson and Hanson, 1980). Calcium uptake by roots leads to millimolar concentrations of Ca2+ in plant tissues, and in most plants Ca is the second most abundant metal and the fifth most abundant element, after C, H, O and K (Epstein, 1972). At the subcellular level, certain organelles, such as the large central vacuole, may have similarly high Ca concentrations, but cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels are three to four orders of magnitude lower. Despite the abundance of Ca in plant tissues and the small amounts required for most cellular processes, the supply of Ca to the plant must be uninterrupted. Removal of Ca from the nutrient supply results in rapid death of cells in the apical meristem and a cessation of growth (Epstein, 1972). Just why this calcium starvation occurs when Ca levels in the plant are so high is not fully understood, but the low mobility of Ca within the plant body must be at least partially responsible. The extremely low mobility of Ca in plants can best be understood by examining solute transport through the plant. Localized transport from cell to cell occurs by diffusion through cytoplasmic connections called plasmodesmata (Lucas and Robards, 1990), whereas long-distance transport occurs in a specialized vascular system through phloem and xylem elements (Turgeon, 1989). Transport of solutes from leaves or other potential Ca2+ stores occurs by a pressure-flow mechanism whereby solutes are loaded into the cytosol of the phloem sieve elements, and an osmotically driven pressure gradient drives solute flow at rates that can average one meter per hour. Although phloem cells are efficient sugar transporters because they contain high sugar concentrations, 100 mg/ml or more, they are inefficient Ca2+ transporters because Ca2+ is unlikely to exceed 100200 nM in their cyotsol. Thus, whether Ca2+ is transported by diffusion from cell to cell through plasmodesmata or by pressure flow through the phloem, its transport is limited by its concentration in the cytosol of the transporting cells. Since plants cannot redistribute Ca2+ efficiently over long distances, Ca absorbed by roots and transported through the xylem is largely utilized or sequestered locally. Most of the Ca absorbed by plants is found in the cell wall (Bush and McColl, 1987; Cleland et al., 1990) and the vacuole (Clarkson and Hanson, 1980). The nature of the interaction of Ca2+ with the cell wall is poorly understood, although a role for Ca2+ in strengthening the wall by cross-linking the carboxyl groups of the pectic polymers has been proposed (Cleland et al., 1990). There is also almost universal agreement among plant physiologists that high Ca concentrations are required at the outer surface of the plasma membrane (PM) to maintain the structural and functional integrity of the PM (Clarkson and Hanson, 1980). The precise roles of these high Ca concentrations at the PM are not known. The Ca that is sequestered in the vacuole is found mostly as salts of oxalic, phosphoric and phytic acids. Although these are often thought of as insoluble, they may be mobilizable (Borchert, 1990). Although internal Ca stores and the extracellular environment both contain millimolar Ca concentrations, cytoplasmic Ca 2+ homeostasis follows the same rules in plants as it does in animals. The concentration of free Ca2+ in the cytosol is maintained near pCa 7 by pumps and channels located in the PM and in the membranes of cellular organelles. These transporters are regulated by environmental and hormonal signals that induce changes in cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentrations. Recent progress in understanding the many roles played by Ca2+ in plant cells has relied on improved methods for measuring intracellular Ca2+ and monitoring its changes as cells respond to various stimuli. Further progress, especially with regard to Ca2+ transport, has been driven by electrophysiological measurements coupled with traditional biochemistry. This review will emphasize these areas and will suggest directions in which we believe the field will advance. MEASURING CALCIUM IN PLANTS Fluorescent dyes Over the last five years studies of Ca2+-based signal transduction and homeostasis have been advanced by the development of techniques to directly measure cytosolic Ca2+ levels in living, functioning plant cells. Calcium-selective microelectrodes have been used extensively to monitor Key words: aequorin, calcium, signal transduction 454 S. Gilroy, P. C. Bethke and R. L. Jones changes in cytosolic Ca2+ and continue to provide insight into Ca2+-based signal transduction and Ca2+ homeostasis in plant cells. However, microelectrodes are difficult to construct and use (Miller and Sanders, 1987; Felle, 1988a,b,1989) and can only measure Ca2+ at one point in the cell. These limitations have lead to the development of fluorescent dyes that allow quantification of the temporal and spatial dynamics of cytosolic Ca2+ (Grynkiewicz et al., 1985; Tsien and Poenie, 1986; Haugland, 1992). The Ca2+indicating dyes fall into two broad categories, single-wavelength and ratio dyes. The range of fluorochromes available allows plant biologists to select indicators that are compatible with windows in the autofluorescence spectrum of their cells. With single-wavelength dyes, such as Fluo-3 or Calcium Green, the intensity of fluorescence increases with the concentration of free Ca2+. Calibration of these dyes is complex, as errors arise if the dye is not evenly distributed within the cytoplasm. They have been successfully used to visualize Ca2+ dynamics (Gilroy and Jones, 1992), however, and they are especially useful in confocal microscopy, where rejection of out-of-focus blur allows much clearer visualization of cytosolic ion levels (Fig. 1A; Gehring et al., 1990 a,b; Williams et al., 1990; Fricker and White, 1992; Gilroy and Jones, 1992; Irving et al., 1992; Shacklock et al., 1992). Ratio dyes, such as fura-2 or Indo-1, show a shift in their excitation or emission spectra upon binding Ca2+. By monitoring the ratio of fluorescence intensity at two wavelengths, cytosolic Ca2+ can be measured (Grynkiewicz et al., 1985; Tsien and Poenie, 1986). The advantage of ratio dyes is that, although the ratio of fluorescence intensities is Ca2+-dependent, it is independent of dye concentration or localization. Ratio analysis of Ca2+ has found wide application in animal cells and has recently been adopted by plant biologists (reviewed by Read et al., 1992, 1993). A major advance in this technology is the combination of ratio analysis with the superior spatial resolution and threedimensional reconstruction capability of the confocal microscope. This approach is now being applied to plant cells and promises to yield further insights into the intricacies of Ca2+ signalling (Fricker and White, 1992). The primary obstacle to using fluorescent indicators in plant cells has been dye uptake. Ca2+-sensitive dyes are highly charged and do not readily cross biological membranes.The ester loading technique developed by Tsien (1981) and used by animal cell biologists to load cells with Ca2+ indicators has had limited applicability to plant cells because of extracellular hydrolysis (e.g. see Cork, 1986; Gilroy et al., 1986, 1991; Hahm and Saunders, 1991), incomplete removal of ester groups in the cytosol (Bush and Jones, 1987), or sequestration of the dyes by organelles (e.g. see Read et al., 1992). To overcome these limitations, plant biologists have developed or adapted other loading techniques such as acid loading, electroporation, detergent permeabilization and microinjection. Acid loading Acid loading of dyes into the cytoplasm utilizes the proton binding properties of dyes to produce an uncharged molecule at low pH (approximately pH 5) that is lipid-soluble. Once in the cytosol, where the pH is about 7, the dye is deprotonated and trapped as the charged anion, the fluorescence of which indicates cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration. This technique, developed by Bush and Jones (1987), has been succesfully applied to plant protoplasts (Bush and Jones, 1987, 1988; Lynch et al., 1989; Kiss et al., 1991; Russ et al., 1991; Gilroy and Jones, 1992) and walled cells (Hahm and Saunders, 1991; Russ et al., 1991). Microinjection Of the other dye-loading techniques applied to plant cells, which include reversible permeabilization of the PM by electroporation (Gilroy et al., 1986, 1987, 1989; Scheuerlein et al., 1991; Shacklock et al., 1992) and detergent treatment (Timmers et al., 1991), the most widely applicable has been microinjection. Although technically demanding, dyes have been loaded by both iontophoretic and pressure injection into plant cells ranging in size from small stomatal guard cells (10 µm × 30 µm) (Gilroy et al., 1990, 1991; McAinsh et al., 1990, 1992) to pollen tubes (15 µm × >100 µm) (Miller et al., 1992; Read et al., 1992) and even isolated protoplasts (40 µm diameter) (Gilroy and Jones, 1992). The advantage of microinjection is that it allows simultaneous addition of other effector molecules, such as caged Ca2+ or caged IP3, and observation of their effects on cytosolic Ca2+ levels (Gilroy et al., 1990). The disadvantage is that analysis is limited to single cells, whereas groups of cells and even tissues can be loaded by the esteror acid-loading techniques (Fig. 1C; Gehring et al., 1990a,b; Irving et al., 1992; Williams et al., 1990). Sequestration of fluorescent dyes Serious problems associated with fluorescence imaging of plant cells have been the sequestration of fluorescent dyes by organelles such as endoplasmic reticulum (ER, Bush et al., 1989), vacuole (Bush and Jones, 1987; Gilroy et al., 1989; Callaham and Hepler, 1991; Gilroy and Jones, 1992) and nucleus (McAinsh et al., 1990; Gilroy et al., 1990, 1991), and/or rapid leakage across the PM. Sequestration can reduce the window for measurement of cytosolic Ca2+ from hours to a few minutes. For indicators that are microinjected, the problem has been largely overcome by using membrane-impermeant dyes linked to dextrans of >10 kDa (e.g. see Gilroy and Jones, 1992; Miller et al., 1992). Such an approach has been used to distinguish hot spots of cytosolic Ca2+ from accumulation of dye into organelles (Gilroy and Jones, 1992). However, subcellular localizations of even dextran-coupled dyes have been reported in fungal hyphae and pollen tubes (Read et al., 1992). The cell wall can also be a significant binding site for dyes (Lynch et al., 1989; Gilroy et al., 1991; Hahm and Saunders, 1991), but confocal imaging can resolve cytosolic fluorescence from that of the cell wall, and using protoplasts or microinjection circumvents problems with the cell wall. Transformation with aequorin A recently developed alternative to the dye technology is the transformation of cells with the gene for aequorin. This technique for measuring Ca2+ has great potential for expanding our knowledge of the intricacies of Ca2+ dynamics, particularly in multicellular organisms, and has been Calcium homeostasis in plants applied to tobacco (Knight et al., 1991b, 1992), yeast (Shimada et al., 1991) and Escherichia coli (Knight et al., 1991a). Aequorin is a Ca2+-dependent, luminescent protein isolated from the coelenterate Aequoria victoriae sp. It consists of a 22 kDa apoprotein and a small prosthetic group (coelentrazine). Upon binding Ca2+ the aequorin molecule emits a photon of blue light and the coelentrazine is oxidized and inactivated. The molecule is responsive to Ca2+ in the range 10−7 to 10−5 M (Blinks, 1986, 1989). This wide dynamic range and the high selectivity of aequorin for Ca2+ make it ideal for monitoring cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels. This is especially true as the low autoluminescence from most cell types makes detection of emitted light a particularly sensitive indicator, immune to the photobleaching and photodamage often associated with fluorescent probes. Aequorin, however, has multiple negative charges and so does not readily cross membranes. Animal cells have been loaded with aequorin by a range of treatments including liposome fusion, hyperpermeabilization, scrape loading and microinjection (reviewed by Blinks, 1986). Plant cells have been loaded by electroporation (Gilroy et al., 1989) or, more routinely, by microinjection (Williamson and Ashley, 1982). All of these approaches are traumatic to the cell and technically demanding. The aequorin apoprotein gene has been cloned in several laboratories (Inouye et al., 1985; Prasher et al., 1985). The availability of this cDNA, the ability to reconstitute active aequorin in situ in the cytoplasm by simply adding coelentrazine, which readily crosses membranes, and the relative ease with which plants can be stably transformed (Potrykus, 1991) have led to the use of plants transgenic for aequorin for monitoring cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels. This technology is especially attractive because it is non-invasive and aequorin is thought to remain in the cytosol and be non-toxic (Blinks, 1989). Knight et al. (1991b) have transformed tobacco plants with the aequorin gene under control of the constitutive cauliflower mosaic virus 35 S promoter and shown that an aequorin signal can be detected in whole, intact seedlings. Aequorin is thought to be expressed throughout the plant, although rigorous testing of this assumption has yet to be reported. Using tobacco seedlings transgenic for aequorin, stimuli such as touch, cold shock and fungal elicitors have been shown to cause rapid changes in cytoplasmic Ca2+ (Knight et al., 1991b, 1992). Imaging the transformed plants using a photoncounting camera has revealed waves of luminescence in leaves responding to cold or mechanical shock (Fig. 2). Such data would be extremely difficult to obtain by other Ca2+ measurement approaches. Further advances with this technology can be anticipated. Tissue- or developmental-stage-specific promoters may allow imaging of subpopulations of cells or tissue domains. Synthetic aequorins are available with altered sensitivity to Ca2+ and different emission spectra (Shimomura et al., 1989,1990; Kendall et al., 1992a,b). A synthetic aequorin that shows two peaks in its luminescence spectrum may be especially useful and it is amenable to ratio analysis (Shimomura et al., 1989; Knight et al., 1993). Engineering aequorins with reduced Ca2+ sensitivity is also possible (Kendall et al., 1992b), and these novel aequorins should 455 allow for measurement of relatively high (> 10−6 M) organellar or apoplastic Ca2+, where native aequorin would be rapidly discharged. The availability of signal sequences that target proteins to mitochondria, chloroplasts, vacuoles, ER or PM should allow Ca2+ concentrations at defined subcellular locations to be monitored. Indeed, measurements of organellar Ca 2+ by targeting native aequorin, or aequorin engineered to be less sensitive to Ca2+, to the mitochondria and ER of animal cells have recently been reported (Kendall et al., 1992a; Rizzuto et al., 1992). Application of aequorin technology to plant cells is currently an area of intense activity. It provides plant biologists with a tool to monitor Ca2+ homeostasis and signalling at the whole-tissue level in intact plants. Coupled with the results from a range of studies using Ca2+-selective microelectrodes and fluorescent dyes, aequorin can be expected to enrich our understanding of the multifaceted involvement of Ca 2+ as a signalling molecule in plants. We stress here the need for adequate controls to establish that cell function is not perturbed by the aequorin or fluorescent dye methodology. Plant biologists have used morphological criteria, such as maintenance of stomatal response (Gilroy et al., 1990,1991; McAinsh et al., 1990,1992), organellar morphology (Gilroy et al., 1990, 1991), cell turgor (Gilroy et al., 1990, 1991; McAinsh et al., 1990, 1992), maintenance of growth (Miller et al., 1992) and maintenance of cytoplasmic streaming (Hodick et al., 1991; Miller et al., 1992), as indicators that the measurement protocol was non-perturbing. As an example of the extent of trauma that can occur during dye loading, analysis of carrot protoplasts loaded with Quin-2 by electroporation revealed that cellular ATP levels were reduced by up to 50% (Gilroy et al., 1986). We would also like to highlight the value of fluorescence measurements where the cell under study is observed with a microscope during the experiment. Cuvette-based studies on populations of cells can be fraught with difficulties. Artifacts can include the masking of temporal changes due to averaging over an asynchronously responding population, the inclusion of optical artifacts arising from changes in cell shape or size and the swamping of signals from live cells by the much larger fluorescence from dye bound to dead cells. For example, Chae et al. (1990) and Shacklock et al. (1992) have both investigated changes in cytosolic Ca2+ in monocot protoplasts irradiated with red light. Chae et al. (1990) observed sustained changes in Ca2+ whereas Shacklock et al. (1992) observed transient increases in response to the light stimulus. Could these discrepencies be due to comparing population measurements (Chae et al., 1990) with results from single-cell imaging (Shacklock et al., 1992)? Ca2+ HOMEOSTASIS IN THE PLANT CYTOPLASM Cytosolic Ca 2+ concentrations in plant cells at rest, approximately 100-200 nM, are typical of those found in all eukaryotes. The cytoplasm is bounded on the outside by the PM, which is tightly appressed to the cell wall. These walls, especially in young tissue, are porous, allowing for diffusion of water, nutrients and molecules as large as 40 kDa (Carpita, 1982). Within the matrix of the wall, and 456 S. Gilroy, P. C. Bethke and R. L. Jones often chelated by it, Ca2+ concentrations can be high, at the least 10−4 to 10−5 M (Cleland et al., 1990; Evans et al., 1991). The cytoplasm is bounded on the inside by the endomembrane system, which delineates numerous organelles. Of these, at least the vacuole and ER have Ca2+ concentrations higher than that of the cytoplasm. The vacuole may be particularly important as a repository for cell Ca2+, as it often accounts for 90-95% of the cell’s volume and contains millimolar concentrations of Ca2+ (Felle, 1988). Luminal ER Ca2+ has rarely been measured in plants, but has been found to be above 3 µM in one case (Bush et al., 1989). There is evidence that proteinaceous Ca2+ chelators analogous to BiP are also present within the ER (Jones and Bush, 1991). Mitochondria and plastids also have higher than cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels, but will not be considered further here. Because the cytoplasm is surrounded by extensive regions of high Ca2+ and cytoplasmic Ca2+ must be maintained at nanomolar levels to support ATP-based metabolism, a variety of Ca2+ transporters are employed by plant cells to regulate cytoplasmic Ca2+. Recent reviews (Evans et al., 1991; Johannes et al., 1992a,b; Hetherington et al., 1992; Maathuis and Sanders, 1992) are suggested for the interested reader. A brief discussion of this very active field is given below. Ca2+-ATPases Ca2+-ATPases have been found in the PM, tonoplast and ER of plant cells. The functions of the PM and vacuolar Ca2+-ATPases seem to be long-term maintenance of steadystate Ca 2+ levels (Evans et al., 1991) and resetting of cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentrations (Felle et al., 1992) by transport of Ca 2+ from the cytoplasm to the apoplast or vacuole. The ER Ca2+-ATPase may also serve this function (Hepler and Wayne, 1985) and also provide regions of high Ca2+ within the ER, which may be necessary for protein folding (Sambrook, 1990). Calcium cotransporters and antiporters have not been widely studied in plants, although H+/Ca2+ antiporters have been reported in the vacuolar membranes of oats (Schumaker and Sze, 1990) and red beet (Blackford et al., 1990), presumably functioning in conjunction with the H +-ATPases and H+-PPiases that acidify the vacuole. Ca2+ channels Within the last few years, several plant Ca2+ channels have been identified by their electrophysical characteristics, but identification of Ca2+ channel proteins has proved problematical (Harvey et al., 1989; Hetherington et al, 1992; Thuleau et al., 1993). They have been reported to open in response to voltage (Johannes et al., 1992b), stretch (Cosgrove and Hedrich, 1991), IP3 (Alexandre and Lasalles, 1990,1992; Alexandre et al., 1990) and abscisic acid (ABA) (Schroeder and Hagiwara, 1990). As opposed to the Ca2+ATPases, Ca2+ channels in the PM, and perhaps in the tonoplast, seem to function in short-term modulation of cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels, often in response to extracellular factors. An IP3-regulated channel in the tonoplast may play a major role in the release of Ca2+ into the cytoplasm from intracellular stores, although this has yet to be demonstrated (Schroeder and Thuleau, 1991). The function of stretchactivated Ca 2+ channels is still to be established, but these Table 1. Stimuli that cause changes in cytosolic Ca2+ in plants Stimulus* Hormonal ABA Auxin CK GA Cell type Guard cell Maize coleoptile & root Parsley hypocotyl & root Aleurone cell Maize epidermal cell Maize coleoptile & root Parsley hypocotyl & root Funaria Aleurone cell Physical/chemical Cold shock Tobacco seedling Gravity Maize coleoptile Light Maize coleoptile Oat protoplasts Oat protoplasts Nitellopsis Mougeotia scalaris Salinity Maize root protoplast Touch Tobacco seedling Wind Tobacco seedling Yeast Tobacco seedling elicitors Change in Ca2+ Localised, transient increase Localised, transient increase Localised, transient increase Transient decrease Sustained oscillations Localized, sustained increase Localized, sustained increase Sustained increase Localized, sustained increase Transient increase Sustained increase Sustained increase Sustained decrease Transient increase Sustained decrease Increase Increase Transient increase Transient increase Transient increase Reference† 1-5 6 6 7 8 6 6 9 10-13 14 15 15 16 17 18 19 20 14, 21 21 14 *ABA, abscisic acid; CK, cytokinin; GA, gibberellic acid. †1, Gilroy et al. (1991); 2, McAinsh et al. (1990); 3, McAinsh et al. (1992); 4, Irving et al. (1992); 5, Schroeder and Hagiwara (1990); 6, Gehring et al. (1990a); 7, Wang et al. (1991); 8, Felle (1988a); 9, Hahm and Saunders (1991); 10, Bush and Jones (1987); 11, Bush and Jones (1988); 12, Bush (1992); 13, Gilroy and Jones (1992); 14, Knight et al. (1991b); 15, Gehring et al. (1990b); 16, Chae et al. (1990); 17 , Shacklock et al. (1992); 18, Miller and Sanders (1987); 19, Russ et al. (1991); 20, Lynch et al. (1989); 21, Knight et al. (1992). may prove to be an integral part of the plants response to water availability, externally applied physical forces and growth. PERTURBATION OF CYTOSOLIC Ca2+ Without the use of neurons, plants perceive and respond to environmental stimuli and internally produced signaling molecules. Changes in cytoplasmic Ca2+ are central to these processes. Indeed, cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels have been reported to rise following so many different stimuli (Table 1) that the true role of elevated Ca2+ may be to bring the cell out of a metabolic state of rest and into one of graded response. Of those modulators of cytoplasmic Ca2+, physical stimuli and plant growth regulators will be briefly discussed as areas where significant progress has been made or where exciting new possibilities exist. Physical stimuli It has been known for centuries that when some plants are exposed to physical stimuli, morphological changes occur. Plants shaken by wind are often more compact than those grown in still air; tendrils twine around objects, but only Calcium homeostasis in plants after coming into contact with them. With the production of transgenic plants expressing aequorin, a new avenue has been opened for probing these responses and the role of cellular Ca2+ in them. Knight et al. (1992a,b) have produced transgenic tobacco plants that constituitively express aequorin and have demonstrated that cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration increases instantly in response to touch. Intriguingly, touch also induces the expression of a set of genes including that for calmodulin (Braam and Davis, 1990; Braam, 1992). Similar changes in cytosolic Ca2+ were seen in response to wind, cold-shock and fungal elicitors that induce plant defense genes. During wind stimulation, Ca2+ increased only while the plants were in motion. Repetitive stimulation resulted in a loss of sensitivity, which returned after 45-60 seconds. The source of increased Ca2+ resulting from wind or cold-shock was examined with the putative ion channel blockers La3+, Gd3+ and ruthenium red. Both 10 mM La3+ and Gd3+ eliminated the cold shock response but did not affect the windinduced Ca 2+ increase. Ruthenium red at 50 µM prevented the wind response but not the cold-shock response. It was proposed that the origin of increased cytosolic Ca2+ is extracellular in the case of cold-shock and organellar in the case of wind induction. Evidence for the involvement of Ca2+ in the gravitropic response has been provided by Gehring et al. (1990b). Using the dye Fluo-3 AM loaded into abraded maize stem segments and confocal microscopy, they found that repositioning coleoptiles from vertical to horizontal resulted in an increase in cytoplasmic Ca2+ from 255 to 370 nM in cells on the lower side of the tissue. The plant growth regulator auxin is widely thought to be an integral part of the gravitropic response. Gerhing et al. (1990a) have also shown that epidermal and cortical cells of maize coleoptiles exhibited an increase in cytoplasmic Ca2+ after treatment with the synthetic auxin 2,4-D, suggesting that the auxin response is linked to Ca2+. Because of inherent difficulties associated with dye loading and calibration with large tissue pieces, further work in this area is eagerly awaited. Hormonal responses Where changes in cytosolic Ca2+ can be linked to an easily measured response, progress in understanding how Ca2+ levels change and what different calcium concentrations may do has been most rapid. Studies on the cereal aleurone and the epidermal guard cell pair have benefited from the availability of a functional assay and represent the bestunderstood examples of how higher plant cells use Ca2+ to link signal with response. The cereal aleurone The cereal aleurone cell secretes a battery of hydrolytic enzymes, predominantly the Ca2+-containing metaloprotein α-amylase, upon stimulation by gibberellic acid (GA). Bush (1992) has shown that when aleurone layers from wheat are exposed to GA, cytosolic Ca2+ levels rise within minutes. Incubation with the Ca2+ channel blocker nifedipine prevented the rise in cytosolic Ca2+. GA treatment also reduced the ability of the PM Ca2+-ATPase to lower cytosolic Ca2+ following an external Ca2+ pulse. The suggestion is that both increased activity of Ca2+ channels in the PM and 457 decreased activity of a PM Ca2+-ATPase are responsible for the GA-stimulated increase in free Ca2+. Gilroy and Jones (1992) have found a similar, though slower (4 hour) rise in cytosolic Ca2+ from 100 to 300 nM upon incubation of wallless aleurone protoplasts with GA. This precedes the onset of enzyme secretion. Subsequent incubation with ABA reset cytosolic Ca 2+ to resting levels, and secretion then ceased. Ratio and confocal imaging of individual protoplasts loaded with Fluo-3 revealed heterogeneity of Ca 2+ within the cytoplasm, with the region just below the PM showing the highest concentration (Fig. 1A,B; Gilroy and Jones, 1992). This further suggests that in the aleurone cell, the increase in cytosolic free Ca 2+ results from import through the PM, not from internal stores. Following GA stimulation, a Ca2+/calmodulin-regulated Ca2+-ATPase in the ER also becomes more active (Bush et al., 1989; Gilroy and Jones, 1993), providing the substrate for formation of the Ca2+requiring α-amylase holoenzyme. The stomatal guard cell The epidermal guard cell pair forms a pore, the stomate, through which CO2 enters and water leaves the plant. The aperture of the pore is controlled by the guard cells, which when fully turgid produce maximal opening and when nonturgid close the pore. This provides the primary mechanism by which plants regulate their rate of water loss. ABA has long been known to cause stomatal closure. Several groups have recently shown that application of ABA to guard cells results in a rapid rise in cytosolic Ca2+ preceding stomatal closure (McAinsh et al., 1990, 1992; Gilroy et al., 1991; Irving et al., 1992). Fluorescence ratio imaging of Com melina communis guard cells using Indo-1 revealed hot spots of Ca 2+ in the cytoplasm around the nucleus and vacuole (Fig. 1D,E; Gilroy et al., 1991). The rate of cytosolic Ca2+ increase was reduced by 1 mM La3+, but an increase still occured with external EGTA pretreatment. These results suggested that Ca2+ release from internal stores could play a role in triggering the stomatal response. Microinjection of caged Ca2+ or caged IP3 into guard cells and photolysis of the caged group also results in increased Ca2+ levels and subsequent stomatal closure (Gilroy et al., 1990), reinforcing the idea that an increase in cytosolic Ca2+ triggers stomatal closure. Gilroy et al. (1991), however, observed that, although guard cells always closed in response to ABA, Ca2+ levels were elevated in only 40% of the guard cells tested. This led Gilroy et al. (1991) to suggest that ABA-induced stomatal closure may occur through both Ca2+-dependent and Ca2+-independent pathways, although this is controversial (McAinsh et al., 1992). Schroeder and Hagiwara (1990) used simultaneous patch clamping of the guard cell PM and fluorescent imaging of cytosolic Ca2+ using fura-2 to demonstrate that ABA induced repetitive increases in cytosolic Ca2+. Calcium increase was coincident with nonspecific cation channel openings, and reversal potential data indicated that Ca2+ enters the cell through these channels. Intriguingly, Schroeder and Hagiwara (1990) found that only one third of the guard cells in epidermal strips of Vicia faba closed when perfused with ABA, and 37% of the protoplasts examined by patch clamping showed an ABA-induced rise in cytosolic Ca 2+. Hedrich et al. (1990) have also shown that 458 S. Gilroy, P. C. Bethke and R. L. Jones Fig. 1. Imaging of cytosolic Ca2+ levels in plant cells. Ca2+ concentrations have been colorcoded according to the inset scale. (A,B) Barley aleurone protoplast microinjected with Calcium Green-dextran and treated with 5 µM GA for 0 (A) or 18 hours (B). Bar, 10 µm. (C) Arabidopsis mesophyll cells in a whole leaf, loaded with Calcium Green. Lower epidermis was peeled from a leaf and indicator was loaded into the whole tissue by incubation at pH 4.5 for 2 hours with 25 µM dye. Leaves were then washed twice with water and imaged using the Phoibos 1000 confocal microscope and the 488 nm line of the argon ion laser, a 500 nm dichroic mirror and a 530 nm,15 nm half-bandwidth emission filter. Due to the difficulties in calibrating dye responsiveness in whole tissues the values shown should be taken as approximations only. Bar, 50 µm. (D,E) Guard cell of Commelina communis microinjected with Indo-1. Lower epidermis was peeled from leaves and mounted in a perfusion chamber. Individual guard cells were microinjected with Indo-1 and cytosolic Ca2+ imaged before (D) or 15 minutes after (E) stimulating the stomate to close by elevating extracellular Ca2+ from 20 µM to 1 mM, according to Gilroy et al. (1991). Bar, 10 µm. v, vacuole; p, phytic acid bodies; c, chloroplast; m, mesophyll; a, air space; n, nucleus. (A-B) Gilroy and Jones, unpublished; (C) Gilroy and Bent, unpublished; (D-E) modified from Gilroy et al. (1991). elevated cytosolic free Ca2+ activates voltage-dependent anion channels. This leads to a possible scheme for ABA- induced stomatal closure, i.e. efflux of ions from the stomatal guard cell and resultant reduction in turgor (Macrobbie, 1992). In this scheme ABA causes opening of non- Calcium homeostasis in plants 459 Fig. 2. The effects of coldshock on the luminescence of a cotyledon from an aequorintransformed tobacco plant. Images were accumulated for 25 seconds at the indicated time after treatment with ice (star) at the tip of the cotyledon. The total photon count for each image (± 10%) is shown, top right. The images have been coded according to: red, high photon fluxes (i.e. elevated Ca2+); blue, low; black, background. Bar, 100 µm. Modified from Knight et al. (1993). specific cation channels in the PM, allowing for entry of Ca2+ and resulting in an increase in cytosolic free Ca 2+ concentration. Higher Ca2+ concentrations might lead to Ca2+induced Ca2+ release from internal stores or IP3 production, causing release of additional Ca2+ from an IP3-mobilizable pool. The opening of Ca2+-permeable channels in the PM could depolarize the membrane and activate Ca2+-dependent, voltage-dependent anion channels. Depolarization would also tend to close inward K+ channels. Activation of an outward K+ channel may subsequently occur in response to changes in cytosolic pH. The net efflux of ions would then cause an increase in water potential, a reduction in turgor as water leaves the cells, and closure of the stomatal pore. For recent reviews of guard cell function with respect to Ca2+ and ion channels see Macrobbie (1992) and Schroeder (1992). FUTURE PROSPECTS We foresee rapid progress in the isolation and sequencing of genes encoding Ca-transporters. A putative ER Ca2+ATPase from tomato has been cloned, and the availability of this probe should lead to the isolation of other ER Ca2+ATPase genes (Wimmers et al., 1992). Rapid progress in the molecular cloning of Ca2+ channels from plants can also be expected now that it has been demonstrated that Xeno pus oocytes can be used for the functional expession of plant ion channel genes (Boorer et al., 1992; Cao et al., 1992). Elucidation of the primary amino acid sequence of Ca2+-transporters should lead to new insights into their regulation and an enhanced understanding of how plant cells control cytoplasmic and organellar Ca2+ concentrations. Although recent work on Ca2+ in plants has emphasized Ca2+ at the single cell level, we anticipate that the focus will change, both by narrowing to the subcellular level, and by broadening to the tissue level. At the subcellular level, Ca2+ heterogeneity within the cytoplasm, perhaps resulting from segregation of differentially regulated transporters, may aid in disecting out spatially distinct Ca2+-mediated events, as recently suggested for hippocampal neurons (Bading et al., 1993). At the tissue level, there has been little effort to understand how Ca2+ acts to transmit information over long distances in plants. The recent work from Trewavas’ laboratory using tobacco plants transgenic for aequorin suggests that stimuli such as cold shock or wounding are propagated by waves of Ca2+ (Fig. 2; and Knight et al., 1991b, 1993). How these waves are propagated, how far they extend, and the responses that they induce as they pass through tissues are unknown. Our knowledge of how Ca2+ homeostasis and signalling are intertwined with other cellular signals, such as pH, is also likely to expand exponentially in the next few years. The evidence is overwhelming that fine control of cellular processes is not accomplished by isolated signals but by a web of interwoven signal transduction chains. Identification of these chains and the interactions that tie them together will pose a serious challenge to plant cell biologists in the coming decade. The authors thank Drs Marc Knight, Nick Read and Tony Trewavas for the images of the aequorin-transformed plants, Dr Andrew Bent for the image of dye-loaded Arabidopsis leaves and Eleanor Crump for help in preparing this manuscript. Russell Jones acknowledges the support of the National Science Foundation and the US Department of Agriculture. 460 S. Gilroy, P. C. Bethke and R. L. Jones REFERENCES Alexandre, J. and Lassalles, J. P. (1990). Effect of D-myo-inositol 1,4,5trisphosphate on the electrical properties of the red beet vacuole membrane. Plant Physiol. 93, 837-840. Alexandre, J. and Lassalles J. P. (1992). Intracellular Ca2+ release by IP3 in plants and effect of buffers on Ca2+ diffusion. Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. Lond. B, 338, 53-61. Alexandre, J., Lassalles, J. P. and Kado, R. T. (1990). Opening of Ca 2+ channels in isolated red beet root vacuole membrane by inositol 1,4,5trisphosphate. Nature 343, 567-570. Bading, H. Ginty, D. D. and Greenberg, M. E. (1993). 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