Ca2+-activated anion channels and membrane depolarizations induced by blue light and cold in arabidopsis seedlings

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Abstract

The activation of an anion channel in the plasma membrane of Arabidopsis thaliana hypocotyls by blue light (BL) is believed to be a signal-transducing event leading to growth inhibition. Here we report that the open probability of this particular anion channel depends on cytoplasmic Ca2+ ([Ca2+](cyt)) within the concentration range of 1 to 10 μM, raising the possibility that BL activates the anion channel by increasing [Ca2+](cyt). Arabidopsis seedlings cytoplasmically expressing aequorin were generated to test this possibility. Aequorin luminescence did not increase during or after BL, providing evidence that Ca2+ does not play a second-messenger role in the activation of anion channels. However, cold shock simultaneously triggered a large increase in [Ca2+](cyt) and a 110-mV transient depolarization of the plasma membrane. A blocker of the anion channel, 5-nitro-2-(3-phenylpropylamino)-benzoic acid, blocked 61% of the cold-induced depolarization without affecting the increase in [Ca2+](cyt). These data led us to propose that cold shock opens Ca2+ channels at the plasma membrane, allowing an inward, depolarizing Ca2+ current. The resulting large increase in [Ca2+](cyt) activates the anion channel, which further depolarizes the membrane. Although an increase in [Ca2+](cyt) may activate anion channels in response to cold, it appears that BL does so via a Ca2+-independent pathway.

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Lewis, B. D., Karlin-Neumann, G., Davis, R. W., & Spalding, E. P. (1997). Ca2+-activated anion channels and membrane depolarizations induced by blue light and cold in arabidopsis seedlings. Plant Physiology, 114(4), 1327–1334. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.114.4.1327

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