Literature DB >> 19521471

Shade-Induced Action Potentials in Helianthus annuus L. Originate Primarily from the Epicotyl.

Rainer Stahlberg1, Nicholas R Stephens, Robert E Cleland, Elizabeth Van Volkenburgh.   

Abstract

Repeated observations that shading (a drastic reduction in illumination rate) increased the generation of spikes (rapidly reversed depolarizations) in leaves and stems of many cucumber and sunflower plants suggests a phenomenon widespread among plant organs and species. Although shaded leaves occasionally generate spikes and have been suggested to trigger systemic action potentials (APs) in sunflower stems, we never found leaf-generated spikes to propagate out of the leaf and into the stem. On the contrary, our data consistently implicate the epicotyl as the location where most spikes and APs (propagating spikes) originate. Microelectrode studies of light and shading responses in mesophyll cells of leaf strips and in epidermis/cortex cells of epicotyl segments confirm this conclusion and show that spike induction is not confined to intact plants. 90% of the epicotyl-generated APs undergo basipetal propagation to the lower epicotyl, hypocotyl and root. They propagate with an average rate of 2 +/- 0.3 mm s(-1) and always undergo a large decrement from the hypocotyl to the root. The few epicotyl-derived APs that can be tracked to leaf blades (< 10%) undergo either a large decrement or fail to be transmitted at all. Occasionally (5% of the observations) spikes were be generated in hypocotyl and lower epicotyl that moved towards the upper epicotyl unaltered, decremented, or amplified. This study confirms that plant APs arise to natural, nontraumatic changes. In simultaneous recordings with epicotyl growth, AP generation was found to parallel the acceleration of stem growth under shade. The possible relatedness of both processes must be further investigated.

Entities:  

Keywords:  AP propaqgation; Helianthus annuus L.; action potentials; amplification; decrement; natural induction; stem growth

Year:  2006        PMID: 19521471      PMCID: PMC2633695          DOI: 10.4161/psb.1.1.2275

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Signal Behav        ISSN: 1559-2316


  14 in total

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