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Plant Physiol, November 2001, Vol. 127, pp. 1193-1203
Transient Dissociation of Polyribosomes and Concurrent
Recruitment of Calreticulin and Calmodulin Transcripts in
Gravistimulated Maize Pulvini1
Ingo
Heilmann,2*
Jai
Shin,3
Jamie
Huang,
Imara Y.
Perera, and
Eric
Davies
Department of Botany, North Carolina State University, Raleigh,
North Carolina 27695-7612
The dynamics of polyribosome abundance were studied in
gravistimulated maize (Zea mays) stem pulvini. During
the initial 15 min of gravistimulation, the amount of large
polyribosomes transiently decreased. The transient decrease in
polyribosome levels was accompanied by a transient decrease in
polyribosome-associated mRNA. After 30 min of gravistimulation, the
levels of polyribosomes and the amount of polyribosome-associated mRNA
gradually increased over 24 h up to 3- to 4-fold of the initial
value. Within 15 min of gravistimulation, total levels of transcripts
coding for calreticulin and calmodulin were elevated 5-fold in maize
pulvinus total RNA. Transcripts coding for calreticulin and calmodulin
were recruited into polyribosomes within 15 min of gravistimulation.
Over 4 h of gravistimulation, a gradual increase in the
association of calreticulin and calmodulin transcripts with
polyribosomes was seen predominantly in the lower one-half of the maize
pulvinus; the association of transcripts for vacuolar invertase with
polyribosomes did not change over this period. Our results suggest that
within 15 min of gravistimulation, the translation of the majority of transcripts associated with polyribosomes decreased, resembling a
general stress response. Recruitment of calreticulin and calmodulin transcripts into polyribosomes occurred predominantly in the lower pulvinus one-half during the first 4 h when the presentation time for gravistimulation in the maize pulvinus is not yet complete.
1
This work was supported by the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration Specialized Center of Research and
Training (grant no. NAGW-4984 to E.D.).
2
Present address: Department of Biology, Brookhaven
National Laboratory, 50 Bell Ave., Upton, NY 11973.
3
Present address: Department of Plant and Microbial
Biology, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA
94720-3102.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail heilmann{at}bnl.gov; fax
631-344-3407.
© 2001 American Society of Plant Physiologists
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