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Contact: Kim McDonald (858)
534-7572 Comment:
Julian I. Schroeder (858)
534-7759, Gethyn
Allen (858) 534-7432 Photo
of a pair of guard cells surrounding an open stomatal pore UCSD
RESEARCHERS DECIPHER MOLECULAR 'CODE' CAPABLE OF CONTROLLING PLANT WATER LOSS
DURING DROUGHTS
The
discovery of this signaling mechanism, a kind of biological Morse code used by
plants to control the opening and closing of stomata, is described in the June
28 issue of Nature by biologists at the University of California, San Diego
working with two German collaborators. Their achievement opens up a new area
of study for plant scientists and may one day allow them to engineer
drought-resistant crops that can more effectively survive water shortages by
limiting water loss during droughts. "Much
of the land used for agriculture is not irrigated because water is either
unavailable or too expensive," says Julian I. Schroeder, a professor of
biology at UCSD who headed the research team. "So if crops can be
engineered to respond to droughts by more rapidly and effectively closing
their stomatal pores, where 95 percent of the water loss in plants occur, they
could better survive drought periods by conserving water until the next rain
hits. The commercial impact would be substantial. In the past decade,
the average loss in the corn crop in the United States during three major
droughts was 30 percent." In
their study, the scientists discovered that specialized cells in the leaves
called guard cells that surround each pore, or stoma, "tune in" to
the frequency of calcium oscillations in the cell, just as we might tune into
a specific radio signal on the FM dial. When these oscillations of calcium
concentrations in the cell are at just the right frequency, the scientists
discovered, the guard cells respond by closing the stomata for extended
periods. When the oscillations are not at the right frequency, the
stomata-which initially close in response to elevations in calcium-reopen
within an hour. "Plants
are smarter than we thought they were," says Gethyn J. Allen, a UCSD
biologist and the first author of the research paper. "They can tune in
to appropriate stimuli and tune out inappropriate stimuli. The guard cells can
read the oscillations and modify their behavior. If the calcium oscillations
are either too fast or too slow, the guard cells can sense that and the
stomata will open up again." Plant
scientists have for more than a decade suspected that calcium oscillations
might play a role in the opening and closing of stomata. The UCSD scientists
were able to prove this was the case and crack the calcium code by conducting
a series of experiments on a normal and a mutant form of the common laboratory
plant, Arabidopsis. The
researchers showed that elevated calcium concentrations in the guard cells of
normal plants produced short-term closures of the stomata for less than an
hour. But long-term closures-more than three hours-were evident only when the
oscillation of calcium reached a specific frequency. Studying a mutant
provided by Erwin Grill at the Technical University of Munich, that is
insensitive to a hormone, ABA, secreted by plants under drought-stress
conditions, the scientists received further confirmation of the
calcium-oscillation frequency required for long-term closures of stomata. One
effect of the mutant's insensitivity to the drought-stress hormone is that it
produces rapid calcium oscillations, far too rapid to stimulate the guard
cells to close. But by experimentally slowing
down the calcium oscillations in the mutant to the same frequency at which
normal Arabidopsis close their stomata for long periods, Allen, Schroeder and
their colleagues were able to demonstrate that the mutant's stomata could also
be closed for long periods. "Scientists
have speculated for years that there may be a code imbedded in the calcium
signals and what we've done, essentially, is to crack this calcium code,"
says Schroeder, whose colleagues in the study included UCSD biologists Sarah
P. Chu, Carrie L. Harrington and Yat Y. Yang; Thomas Hoffmann of the Technical
University of Munich; and Karin Schumacher of the University of Tubingen, who
participated in the experiments at UCSD. Schroeder
emphasizes that his team's discovery is still very much in the realm of basic
research and far from any practical applications. "We don't know how to
genetically engineer a plant to hit the right frequency to close its stomata
in response to a drought," he says. "That lies in the future. But
understanding this calcium code means we can now learn more about the
mechanisms that control a plant's resistance to drought conditions." "It's
given us clues of where to look for the genes and proteins that control the
closure of stomata," says Allen. "These are some of the unknown
pieces of the puzzle." |
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