Identification of cell populations necessary for leaf-toleaf electrical signaling in a wounded plant

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Abstract

The identity of the cell files necessary for the leaf-to-leaf transmission of wound signals plants has been debated for decades. In Arabidopsis, wounding initiates the glutamate receptor-like (GLR)- dependent propagation of membrane depolarizations that lead to defense gene activation. Using a vein extraction procedure we found pools of GLR-fusion proteins in endomembranes in phloem sieve elements and/or in xylem contact cells. Strikingly, only double mutants that eliminated GLRs from both of these spatially separated cell types strongly attenuated leaf-to-leaf electrical signaling. glr3.3 mutants were also compromised in their defense against herbivores. Since wounding is known to cause increases in cytosolic calcium, we monitored electrical signals and Ca2+ transients simultaneously. This revealed that wound-induced membrane depolarizations in the wild-type preceded cytosolic Ca2+ maxima. The axial and radial distributions of calcium fluxes were differentially affected in each glr mutant. Resolving a debate over which cell types are necessary for electrical signaling between leaves, we show that phloem sieve elements and xylem contact cells function together in this process.

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Nguyen, C. T., Kurenda, A., Stolz, S., Chételat, A., & Farmer, E. E. (2018). Identification of cell populations necessary for leaf-toleaf electrical signaling in a wounded plant. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 115(40), 10178–10183. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1807049115

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