| Literature DB >> 29958430 |
Sujuan Shi1, Shugui Li2,3, Muhammad Asim4, Jingjing Mao5, Dizhi Xu6, Zia Ullah7, Guanshan Liu8, Qian Wang9, Haobao Liu10.
Abstract
As a ubiquitous secondary messenger in plant signaling systems, calcium ions (Ca2+) play essential roles in plant growth and development. Within the cellular signaling network, the accurate decoding of diverse Ca2+ signal is a fundamental molecular event. Calcium-dependent protein kinases (CDPKs), identified commonly in plants, are a kind of vital regulatory protein deciphering calcium signals triggered by various developmental and environmental stimuli. This review chiefly introduces Ca2+ distribution in plant cells, the classification of Arabidopsis thaliana CDPKs (AtCDPKs), the identification of the Ca2+-AtCDPK signal transduction mechanism and AtCDPKs’ functions involved in plant growth regulation and abiotic stress responses. The review presents a comprehensive overview of AtCDPKs and may contribute to the research of CDPKs in other plants.Entities:
Keywords: Arabidopsis; CDPK; abiotic stress; calcium; growth; protein structure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29958430 PMCID: PMC6073581 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19071900
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
The concentration of Ca2+ in plant organelles.
| Organelle | [Ca2+]T (mM) | [Ca2+]F (nM) | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vacuole | 80 | 200~5000 | [ |
| Chloroplast | 15 | ~150 | [ |
| Apoplast | ~1.0 | 330~500 | [ |
| Endoplasmic reticulum | - | - | [ |
| Mitochondria | - | ~200 | [ |
| Nucleus | - | ~100 | [ |
| Cytoplasm | - | ~100 | [ |
[Ca2+]T: total Ca2+ concentration; [Ca2+]F: free Ca2+ concentration; -: Not determined.
Figure 1Phylogenetic relationships and characteristics of selected calcium-dependent protein kinases (CDPKs) (modified from [25]). The full-length amino acid sequences of CDPKs from A. thaliana, P. falciparum, and T. gondii were analyzed by MEGA7.0 and UniProt (https://www.uniprot.org/). Arabidopsis thaliana CDPKs (AtCDPKs) are divided into four major subgroups (I–IV). R, root; L, leaf; F, flower; S, silique; GC, guard cell; P, pollen tube cell; MC, mesophyll cell; N, nucleus; C, cytoplasm; PM, plasma membrane; MB, membrane; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; --, not determined. G, the N-myristoylation site. C, the palmitoylation site. U, UniProt Knowledgebase. a Systematic designation given to a gene according to TAIR (www.arabidopsis.org) and UniProt (www.uniprot.org). b, References related to subcellular localization of CPKs: [30,36,37,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63,64]. c, the position of phosphoserine site.
Figure 2Diagram of CDPK structure and the Ca2+-CDPK decoding Mechanism (modified from [68]). (A) Inactive state of the CDPK protein. The auto-inhibitor restrains the kinase activity, while EF-hand motifs do not bind to the junction region. (B) Active state of the CDPK protein. After Ca2+ uploading into elongation factor (EF) hands, N-EF and C-EF hands combine with different sides of junction region, then the kinase domain is released and phosphorylated simultaneously by an upstream kinase. (C) Phosphorylation of target proteins.
Figure 3Amino acid sequence analysis of Ca2+-binding sites (the loop segment of the EF-hand) in AtCDPKs. (A) The amino acid sequences of four EF-hands in AtCDPKs, TgCDPK1, PfCDPK3 and PfCDPK4. The black line in subgroup I represents EF-hand deficiency of CPK25. (B) The monomeric structure of CPK1 J-CaM-LD region. The crystal structure of J-CaM-LD (PBD entry No. 2AAO) downloaded from PDB database is visualized by Swiss-PdbViewer (https://spdbv.vital-it.ch/). The Junction region that contains 31 amino acids is showed by a blue ribbon, while the helices of four EF-hands (EF1~EF4) are displayed by yellow, green, red and brilliant blue ribbons, respectively. The binding loops are displayed by grey bars. Each calcium ion binding to the loop is shown by a gray ball and the chemical bonds accountable for Ca2+-loop interaction are indicated by sticks. (C) Amino acids of four EF loops in charge of Ca2+-binding in CPK1 (or subgroup I) are indicated by asterisks.
Degenerated EF-hand motifs of AtCDPKs.
| CDPK | Subgroup | Degenerated EF-Hand | Position of Altered Amino Acidin Ca2+-Binding Loop | Ca2+-Dependence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CPK25 | I | 1,2 (3,4 missing) | EF1: G3 and EF2: H3 | No |
| CPK23 | II | 1 | Q12 | Weak |
| CPK7 | III | 1 | R5 | No |
| CPK8 | III | 1 | K3 | Weak |
| CPK10 | III | 3 | T6 | Weak |
| CPK13 | III | 2,3 | EF2: K3, K5 and EF3: L9 | Weak |
| CPK14 | III | 1 | R5 | Not analyzed |
| CPK30 | III | undetected | undetected | No |
| CPK32 | III | 1 | R5 | Weak |
The analysis is based on amino acid sequences of the conserved EF-hand motifs and those harbored in AtCDPKs (modified from [1,69]).
Figure 4The function of AtCDPKs in the regulation of plant growth and development. The regulation networks of AtCDPKs in regulation of pollen tube elongation (A), floral signaling (B) and nutrition transport in plant cells (C). PM, plasma membrane. SAM, shoot apical meristem. External environment, photoperiod, light quality, and ambient temperature, as well as endogenous cues.
Figure 5Function of AtCDPKs in abiotic stress responses and abscisic acid (ABA) signaling transduction.