Non-autonomous stomatal control by pavement cell turgor via the K+ channel subunit AtKC1
Author(s) -
Manuel NievesCordones,
Farrukh Azeem,
Yuchen Long,
Martin Boeglin,
Geoffrey Duby,
Karine Mouline,
Eric Hosy,
Alain Vavasseur,
Isabelle Chérel,
Thierry Simonneau,
Frédéric Gaymard,
Jeffrey Leung,
Isabelle Gaillard,
JeanBaptiste Thibaud,
AnneAliénor Véry,
Arezki Boudaoud,
Hervé Sentenac
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
the plant cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.324
H-Index - 341
eISSN - 1532-298X
pISSN - 1040-4651
DOI - 10.1093/plcell/koac038
Subject(s) - guard cell , turgor pressure , biology , plasmolysis , microbiology and biotechnology , biophysics , epidermis (zoology) , trichome , plant cell , botany , arabidopsis , cell wall , biochemistry , anatomy , mutant , gene
Stomata optimize land plants’ photosynthetic requirements and limit water vapor loss. So far, all of the molecular and electrical components identified as regulating stomatal aperture are produced, and operate, directly within the guard cells. However, a completely autonomous function of guard cells is inconsistent with anatomical and biophysical observations hinting at mechanical contributions of epidermal origins. Here, potassium (K+) assays, membrane potential measurements, microindentation, and plasmolysis experiments provide evidence that disruption of the Arabidopsis thaliana K+ channel subunit gene AtKC1 reduces pavement cell turgor, due to decreased K+ accumulation, without affecting guard cell turgor. This results in an impaired back pressure of pavement cells onto guard cells, leading to larger stomatal apertures. Poorly rectifying membrane conductances to K+ were consistently observed in pavement cells. This plasmalemma property is likely to play an essential role in K+ shuttling within the epidermis. Functional complementation reveals that restoration of the wild-type stomatal functioning requires the expression of the transgenic AtKC1 at least in the pavement cells and trichomes. Altogether, the data suggest that AtKC1 activity contributes to the building of the back pressure that pavement cells exert onto guard cells by tuning K+ distribution throughout the leaf epidermis.
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