
doi: 10.1007/pl00008120
pmid: 11540333
For more than a decade it has been assumed that there is a strong relationship between Ca2+ and gravitropism. There is evidence to suggest that the movement of Ca2+ in the wall might regulate extension growth and that free intracellular Ca2+ might mediate signalling in statocytes. However, it is unlikely that changes in either wall Ca2+ or the concentration of free intracellular calcium, [Ca2+]i, act independently of each other. This results in ambiguity in both experimentation and interpretation of experimental information. It is also uncertain that the observed redistributions of wall Ca2+ are sufficient to induce bending and there is at present no direct evidence from measurement or imaging that changes in [Ca2+]i initiate or transduce gravitropic signals. The evidence relating Ca2+ to gravitropism is therefore substantial but still circumstantial. The involvement of free intracellular Ca2+ might best be tested using the new technologies of transgenic aequorin targeted to columella cells and thus resolve this important question. New information which relates control or orientation of tip-growing cells, such as pollen tubes, to cytosolic Ca2+ manipulation is presented. This information may be directly applicable to a gravitropic model system studied for many years, the Chara rhizoid.
Second Messenger Systems, Gravitropism, Calmodulin, Plant Root Cap, Cell Wall, Chlorophyta, Calcium, Gravity Sensing, Egtazic Acid, Calcimycin, Edetic Acid, Chelating Agents, Signal Transduction
Second Messenger Systems, Gravitropism, Calmodulin, Plant Root Cap, Cell Wall, Chlorophyta, Calcium, Gravity Sensing, Egtazic Acid, Calcimycin, Edetic Acid, Chelating Agents, Signal Transduction
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