P2k1 receptor, heterotrimeric gα protein and cngc2/4 are involved in extracellular atp-promoted ion influx in the pollen of arabidopsis thaliana

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Abstract

As an apoplastic signal, extracellular ATP (eATP) is involved in plant growth and development. eATP promotes tobacco pollen germination (PG) and pollen tube growth (PTG) by stimulating Ca2+ or K+ absorption. Nevertheless, the mechanisms underlying eATP-stimulated ion uptake and their role in PG and PTG are still unclear. Here, ATP addition was found to modulate PG and PTG in 34 plant species and showed a promoting effect in most of these species. Furthermore, by using Arabidopsis thaliana as a model, the role of several signaling components involved in eATP-promoted ion (Ca2+, K+) uptake, PG, and PTG were investigated. ATP stimulated while apyrase inhibited PG and PTG. Patch-clamping results showed that ATP promoted K+ and Ca2+ influx into pollen protoplasts. In loss-of-function mutants of P2K1 (dorn1-1 and dorn1-3), heterotrimeric G protein α subunit (gpa1-1, gpa1-2), or cyclic nucleotide gated ion channel (cngc2, cngc4), eATP-stimulated PG, PTG, and ion influx were all impaired. Our results suggest that these signaling components may be involved in eATP-promoted PG and PTG by regulating Ca2+ or K+ influx in Arabidopsis pollen grains.

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Wu, Y., Yin, H., Liu, X., Xu, J., Qin, B., Feng, K., … Shang, Z. (2021). P2k1 receptor, heterotrimeric gα protein and cngc2/4 are involved in extracellular atp-promoted ion influx in the pollen of arabidopsis thaliana. Plants, 10(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/plants10081743

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