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Plant Physiology 84:1337-1342 (1987)
© 1987 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Development and Growth Regulation

Correlation between Calmodulin Activity and Gravitropic Sensitivity in Primary Roots of Maize 1

Charles L. Stinemetz, Konrad M. Kuzmanoff, Michael L. Evans and Harry W. Jarrett

Department of Botany, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, Division of Surgical Oncology, University of Illinois, Chicago, Illinois 60612, Department of Biology, Purdue University School of Science, Indiana University Purdue University at Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Indiana 46223

Recent evidence indicates a role for calcium and calmodulin in the gravitropic response of primary roots of maize (Zea mays, L.). We examined this possibility by testing the relationship between calmodulin activity and gravitropic sensitivity in roots of the maize cultivars Merit and B73 x Missouri 17. Roots of the Merit cultivar require light to be gravitropically competent. The gravitropic response of the Missouri cultivar is independent of light. The occurrence of calmodulin in primary roots of these maize cultivars was tested by affinity gel chromatography followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with bovine brain calmodulin as standard. The distribution of calmodulin activity was measured using both the phosphodiesterase and NAD kinase assays for calmodulin. These assays were performed on whole tissue segments, crude extracts, and purified extracts. In light-grown seedlings of the Merit cultivar or in either dark- or light-grown seedlings of the Missouri cultivar, calmodulin activity per millimeter of root tissue was about 4-fold higher in the apical millimeter than in the subtending 3 millimeters. Calmodulin activity was very low in the apical millimeter of roots of dark-grown (gravitropically nonresponsive) seedlings of the Merit cultivar. Upon illumination, the calmodulin activity in the apical millimeter increased to a level comparable to that of light-grown seedlings and the roots became gravitropically competent. The time course of the development of gravitropic sensitivity following illumination paralleled the time course of the increase in calmodulin activity in the apical millimeter of the root. The results are consistent with the suggestion that calmodulin plays an important role in the gravitropic response of roots.


1 Supported by National Science Foundation grants PCM 8305775 and DMB 8608673 and by National Aeronautics and Space Administration grant NAGW-297.




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