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Functional Plant Biology Functional Plant Biology Society
Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Ca2+ pulsation in BY-2 cells and evidence for control of mechanosensory Ca2+-selective channels by the plasmalemmal reticulum

Barbara G. Pickard A B and Masaaki Fujiki A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Gladys Levis Allen Laboratory of Plant Sensory Physiology, Biology Department, Washington University, St Louis, Missouri 63130-4899, USA.

B Corresponding author. Email: pickard@wustl.edu

Functional Plant Biology 32(10) 863-879 https://doi.org/10.1071/FP05045
Submitted: 4 March 2005  Accepted: 15 June 2005   Published: 5 October 2005

Abstract

A previously unknown cytoskeletal structure, now named the plasmalemmal reticulum (Gens et al. 2000, Protoplasma 212, 115–134), was found in cultured BY-2 tobacco cells during a search for a force-focusing mechanism that might enhance signal transduction by the cells’ mechanosensory Ca2+-selective cation channels (MCaCs). This polyhedral structure, which links cell wall, plasma membrane, and internal cytoplasm, prominently contains arabinogalactan protein (AGP). To check for reticulum-promoted Ca2+ elevation, the AGP-binding reagent (β-d-glucosyl)3 Yariv phenylglycoside has been applied to BY-2 cells expressing a free cameleon Ca2+ reporter. Ca2+ elevation was substantial and prolonged. Moreover it occurred in the nucleus as well as the cytoplasm. Cells treated with non-binding mannosyl Yariv reagent could not be discriminated from untreated controls or those treated with carrier solution alone. Supply of the MCaC inhibiter Gd3+ just before treatment with Yariv reagent prevented Ca2+ rise. These data strongly support the hypothesis that the plasmalemmal reticulum controls MCaC activity. The massive inward spread of Ca2+ suggested that entry of the ion through the channels initiated a wave of release from the ER, and YCX in the ER showed Ca2+ levels consistent with this premise. Cytosolic and nuclear Ca2+ often pulsed in control cells in near synchrony and at rates ranging from zero to five cycles per ∼20-min recording. (Pulsation was over-ridden by the applied amounts of glucosyl Yariv compound.) Suggestively but very crudely, oscillation rate was assessed as possibly correlating with stage of cell cycle. Because cell Ca2+ was lowered and pulsation was eliminated by Gd3+, MCaCs appear to participate in these endogenous fluctuations. The extent to which pulsing plays regulatory roles in relatively undifferentiated types of cells should be evaluated.

Keywords: arabinogalactan protein, BY-2 cells, cameleon, mechanosensory calcium channels, ultradian rhythms.


Acknowledgments

We are grateful for initial funding to BGP from NASA and NSF (Joint Program in Plant Biology grant IBN 941601) and later funding from the USDA (CREES NRI Plant Response to the Environment Program grant 98–35100–7003), and also to Glenn L Allen, Jr. and Gladys Levis Allen for remarkable and critically timed private funding. The relevant early phase of development of a special microscope system with its associated software was funded by NIH RR011380 (P.I. Jerome R Cox). It enabled critical participation of Frederick U Rosenberger, Keith W Doolittle, and Chrysanthe Preza. Joanne Markham (funded by NIH GM 55708 to José-Angel Conchello) provided additional help with algorithms. Following termination of the NIH grant, further development of the microscope system and software was taken over by Karl Kilborn and others of Intelligent Imaging Innovations, Inc. and funded by the Washington University Biology Department courtesy of Ralph S Quatrano.


We thank Eugene A Nothnagel for his gift of Yariv reagents, Jeffrey W Harper and colleagues for cameleons YC2, YC2.1, and YC3.1, and Gero Miesenböck for ratiometric pHlourin. Thanks also to Marcia J Kieliszewski for encouraging us to examine her GFP-LeAGP-1-transformed BY-2 cells, and to R Howard Berg for imaging them with a two-photon microscope. Unstinting technical help from Jasmine Fazzari and Michael Stewart was much appreciated.


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