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Plant Physiol, December 2000, Vol. 124, pp. 1511-1514
SCIENTIFIC CORRESPONDENCE
Glutamate-Gated Calcium Fluxes in
Arabidopsis1
Kirsten L.
Dennison and
Edgar P.
Spalding*
Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin, 430 Lincoln Drive,
Madison, Wisconsin 53706
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ARTICLE |
It is well accepted that endogenous
and environmental signals can influence cellular activities by changing
[Ca2+]cyt (Malhó et
al., 1998 ; Sanders et al., 1999 ). Despite the importance of this
mechanism for coupling stimuli to responses (Malhó et al., 1998 ),
the molecules responsible for generating increases in
[Ca2+]cyt during cell
signaling in plants are not known at the genetic level. The results
presented here raise the possibility that ligand-gated ion channels in
plants such as those predicted by the discovery of ionotropic
glutamate receptor (iGluR)- like genes in Arabidopsis (Lam et
al., 1998 ) are key components of a Ca2+ influx
mechanism important to signal transduction.
In animal brains iGluR channels mediate fast chemical transmission
across synapses by increasing the permeability of the post-synaptic cell membrane to K+, Na+,
and Ca2+ after binding Glu released by the
presynaptic cell (Hille, 1992 ; Hollmann and Heinemann, 1994 ; Dingledine
et al., 1999 ). The resulting Ca2+ entry in
particular has been associated with long-term potentiation of the
synapse, a physiological adaptation important to the learning process
(Baudry and Lynch, 1993 ; Bliss and Collinridge, 1993 ). The Glu receptor
homologs recently identified in plants (Lam et al., 1998 ) are too
divergent from animal iGluRs to know with any certainty what ligand(s)
gate them, what ions are conducted in the open state, and in which
membrane(s) of the cell they function (Chiu et al., 1999 ). Thus the
identification of iGluR sequences in the Arabidopsis genome raises
intriguing questions about the physiological functions of
neurotransmitter-gated channels in plant cells.
The possibility that Glu gates Ca2+-permeable
channels at the plasma membrane of plant cells was explored by
measuring [Ca2+]cyt in
transgenic seedlings expressing aequorin, a
Ca2+-sensitive luminescent protein
(Knight et al., 1991 ). As shown in Figure
1A, Glu application immediately
triggered a very large, transient spike in
[Ca2+]cyt. In separate
experiments the effect of Glu on membrane potential (Vm) was measured with intracellular
microelectrodes inserted into root apices of intact seedlings. Figure
1A also shows that switching the bathing medium from 1 mM KCl to 1 mM K-Glu
induced a large and rapid depolarization of the membrane, as would be expected if the abrupt increase in
[Ca2+]cyt was due to Glu
opening Ca2+-permeable channels at the plasma
membrane. The average peak change in Vm
induced by 1 mM Glu was 55 ± 7 mV
(n = 6 seedlings). This positive shift in
Vm, though consistent with Glu gating an
inward electrogenic Ca2+ current across the
plasma membrane, may also be due to secondary effects of the increased
[Ca2+]cyt on other ion
transporters. Another scenario to consider is that Glu directly gates
channels permeable to ions such as Cl (Cully et
al., 1994 ) in addition to Ca2+-permeable channels
to cause the depolarization. And last, an electrogenic Glu-uptake
mechanism (Boorer et al., 1996 ) may also contribute to the electrical
response. Because these and perhaps other scenarios are not
mutually exclusive, more electrophysiological studies of the connection
between the large Glu-gated changes in
[Ca2+]cyt and the effect
on Vm are warranted.

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Figure 1.
Glu triggers a large transient increase in
[Ca2+]cyt and an
accompanying membrane depolarization. A, The red trace shows
Ca2+-dependent luminescence from whole
aequorin-expressing Arabidopsis seedlings (5- to 8-d-old) measured with
a luminometer as described previously (Lewis et al., 1997 ). The black
trace shows the response of Vm measured by
impaling a cell near the root apex with an intracellular microelectrode
as previously described (Spalding et al., 1999 ). Intact seedlings
between 7- and 14-d-old were used for the
Vm measurements. Glu at a final
concentration of 1 mM was delivered as the
K+ salt. The pH was buffered at 5.7 with 2.3 mM MES
[2-(N-morpholino)-ethanesulfonic acid]. B, The kinetics
and magnitude of the change in
[Ca2+]cyt induced by Glu
resembles the response to cold shock, but is much larger than the touch
response induced by the control treatment. Cold shock was achieved by
injecting 0°C 1 mM KCl into the luminometer
cuvette, whereas the control treatment was room temperature 1 mM KCl. Glu was delivered as 1 mM K-Glu and all solutions were buffered at pH
5.7. Arrow indicates the time of treatment.
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Figure 1B shows that the magnitude and time course of the rapid
increase in [Ca2+]cyt was
similar to the well-studied response to cold shock, i.e. in the
micromolar concentration range and completed within several seconds
(Knight et al., 1991 , 1996 ; Lewis et al., 1997 ). Treatment with 1 mM Glu induced a response that was typically hundreds of fold higher than the control injection of equimolar KCl, which produced
a touch response that may reflect Ca2+ entering
the cytoplasm from internal stores (Haley et al., 1995 ; Legué et
al., 1997 ). The post-peak shoulder apparent in the selected response to
Glu was often, but not always observed. Activation of iGluRs by Glu
causes very similar Ca2+ changes in cells of the
mammalian nervous system (Kirischuk et al., 1999 ; Obrietan and van den
Pol, 1999 ).
If the increase in
[Ca2+]cyt triggered by
Glu resulted at least in part from flux across the plasma membrane from
the apoplasm, impermeant channel blockers and external chelators of
Ca2+ should reduce the response. The results in
Figure 2A demonstrate that pretreatment
with La3+, a frequently used blocker of plasma
membrane Ca2+ channels, inhibited the
Ca2+ spike to the low level induced by the
control treatment. Chelating extracellular Ca2+
by pre-treating seedlings with EGTA was similarly inhibitory (Fig. 2B).
The combined evidence support our suggestion that Glu triggers an influx of Ca2+ across the plasma
membrane and this leads to a dramatic change in
[Ca2+]cyt.
Calcium-induced Ca2+-release from internal
stores such as the vacuole may also contribute (Allen et al.,
1995 ).

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Figure 2.
Inhibitory effects of La3+
and EGTA. A, Pretreatment of seedlings with 5 mM
La3+, an extracellular
Ca2+-channel blocker, inhibited the change in
[Ca2+]cyt induced by Glu,
but had a much lesser effect on the 100-fold smaller response to the
control treatment. B, Chelating extracellular
Ca2+ by pretreatment with EGTA inhibited the
Glu-induced Ca2+ response. The data plotted are
means (±SEM) from three or four independent trials. C,
Treatment of roots with La3+ blocked the
Glu-induced depolarization without affecting the resting
Vm. Roots were treated with 5 mM LaCl3 before and during
exposure to 1 mM K-Glu.
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La3+ also blocked the depolarization triggered by
Glu without affecting the resting Vm (Fig.
2C), indicating that the depolarization is a consequence of the inward
Ca2+ movement. However,
La3+ is not a specific
Ca2+-channel blocker (Lewis and Spalding, 1998 )
and it may prevent the depolarization by blocking a separate Glu-gated
conductance in addition to the Ca2+
pathway. Thus despite the fact that La3+ blocks
the Ca2+ flux and the membrane depolarization,
the exact relationship between the two Glu-gated phenomena should be
considered an open question. An alternative test would be to determine
if EGTA treatment also inhibits the depolarization triggered
by Glu, but stable recordings of Vm are
difficult to obtain when extracellular Ca2+ is
depleted to an extent that significantly affects its availability for
inward fluxes. Patch-clamp studies of the ionic currents activated by
Glu would be the preferred means of obtaining a biophysical description
of the depolarization mechanism.
Glu is the primary natural ligand of iGluRs in the central nervous
system although other non-native ligands are effective and have been
used to classify receptor subtypes. The effectiveness of different
ligands was tested using the aequorin reporter plants. Figure
3 demonstrates that Glu was clearly the
most effective agonist tested (note the logarithmic y-scale).
-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate and
N-methyl-D-aspartate, potent agonists of animal
iGluRs, did not induce a response above the control treatment
(approximately 2% of the L-Glu response). These
non-native agonists of animal iGluRs also did not activate the
Synechocystis GLU0 (Chen et al., 1999 ). It may be that
affinity for -amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate and
N-methyl-D-aspartate evolved in Glu receptors after
the divergence of plants and animals. An alternative possibility is
that Glu-gated Ca2+ entry in Arabidopsis does not
involve iGluR-like molecules, but instead some unrelated
Ca2+-permeable pathway lacking affinity for
typical iGluR agonists is responsible for the phenomenon. The
fact that the response to D-Glu was less than
10% of the L-Glu response indicates high stereochemical specificity of the binding site(s) on whatever molecules
are responsible. Although Glu is clearly an effective ligand in a
plausible concentration range, other ligands may be more
physiologically important. The Arabidopsis genome contains several
iGluR-like genes (Chiu et al., 1999 ) and that diversity may be matched
by a similar diversity of agonists.

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Figure 3.
Relative effectiveness of related compounds.
L-Glu was much more effective than other potential
agonists, including D-Glu and the animal iGluR agonists,
NMDA and AMPA. Note the logarithmic scale of the y axis, and
that the response magnitudes are shown relative to the response induced
by L-Glu. All compounds were administered at a
final concentration of 1 mM. The plotted values
are the means (±SE) of six independent
trials.
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Information on the effective concentration range of Glu would help to
establish a physiological context for this ligand-gated response in
plants. The change in
[Ca2+]cyt induced by Glu
increased between 0.3 and 3 mM, with the concentration for
half-maximal response (EC50) being approximately
1 mM (data not shown). This value is approximately 10-fold
greater than the typical value for prokaryotic and animal iGluRs, but
very similar to the EC50 of
Cl -permeable iGluRs from nematodes (Cully et
al., 1994 ).
If Glu or some other related small organic acid is the primary
endogenous ligand, then it is important to consider how and when the
external ligand-binding site would experience 0.3 to 3 mM
concentrations. Anion channels at the plasma membrane of plant cells
are known to function in the transduction of several signals important
to plant growth and development (Ward et al., 1995 ). These channels are
relatively non-selective among anions and may conduct significant
efflux of dicarboxylic anions such as malate (Hedrich, 1994 ; Schmidt
and Schroeder, 1994 ), and therefore perhaps Glu, as well. When
environmental or endogenous signals activate such anion channels,
apoplastic Glu concentration may rise into the effective range, causing
a transient change in
[Ca2+]cyt that serves to
couple a stimulus to downstream responses. This hypothetical scenario
may be most plausible in roots, where anion-channel mediated release of
dicarboxylic acids has been proposed as a mechanism for combating
Al3+ stress (Delhaize and Ryan, 1995 ; Ryan et
al., 1997 ). Perhaps it is no coincidence that dissection experiments
revealed most of the Ca2+ signal recorded from
intact Arabidopsis seedlings was contributed by the root; leaves and
cotyledons of young plants displayed smaller Glu responses (data not shown).
The results presented here form the basis of our proposition that a key
element of a mechanism for altering
[Ca2+]cyt in plant cells
during signaling is similar to that responsible for neurotransmitter
action in the central nervous system of animals. The evidence would be
bolstered considerably if mutational studies revealed a link between
specific iGluR-like genes and Glu-gated Ca2+
fluxes. Plant biologists interested in Ca2+
signaling are presently particularly well equipped to test this connection because there is a wealth of published details about iGluR-mediated Ca2+ signaling in neurons, the
Arabidopsis genome is essentially sequenced and searchable,
sophisticated reverse-genetic strategies are very practical, and
electrophysiological techniques can measure function with high
resolution. The stage for exciting developments in
Ca2+ signaling is set.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENT |
We thank Jamie Verheyden for technical assistance.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received September 11, 2000; accepted September 25, 2000.
1
This work was supported by the National Science
Foundation (career award no. IBN-9734478 to E.P.S.).
*
Corresponding author; e-mail spalding{at}facstaff.wisc.edu; fax
608-262-7509.
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