Calcium Signals: The Lead Currency of Plant Information Processing

Kudla J, Batistic O, Hashimoto K

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Ca2+ signals are core transducers and regulators in many adaptation and developmental processes of plants. Ca2+ signals are represented by stimulus-specific signatures that result from the concerted action of channels, pumps, and carriers that shape temporally and spatially defined Ca2+ elevations. Cellular Ca2+ signals are decoded and transmitted by a toolkit of Ca2+ binding proteins that relay this information into downstream responses. Major transduction routes of Ca2+ signaling involve Ca2+-regulated kinases mediating phosphorylation events that orchestrate downstream responses or comprise regulation of gene expression via Ca2+-regulated transcription factors and Ca2+-responsive promoter elements. Here, we review some of the remarkable progress that has been made in recent years, especially in identifying critical components functioning in Ca2+ signal transduction, both at the single-cell and multicellular level. Despite impressive progress in our understanding of the processing of Ca2+ signals during the past years, the elucidation of the exact mechanistic principles that underlie the specific recognition and conversion of the cellular Ca2+ currency into defined changes in protein-protein interaction, protein phosphorylation, and gene expression and thereby establish the specificity in stimulus response coupling remain to be explored.

Details about the publication

JournalThe Plant cell (Plant Cell)
Volume22
Issue3
Page range541-563
StatusPublished
Release year2010 (31/03/2010)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1105/tpc.109.072686
Keywordsdependent protein-kinase stomatal guard-cells nucleotide-gated channel vacuolar cation channel pollen-tube growth s-type anion cytosolic Ca2+ transients messenger-rna abundance membrane H+-atpase of-function allele

Authors from the University of Münster

Batistic, Oliver
Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology of Plants - Group Prof. Jörg Kudla
Hashimoto, Kenji
Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology of Plants - Group Prof. Jörg Kudla
Kudla, Jörg
Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology of Plants - Group Prof. Jörg Kudla