4.7 Article

Intersection of two signalling pathways: extracellular nucleotides regulate pollen germination and pollen tube growth via nitric oxide

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 60, Issue 7, Pages 2129-2138

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erp091

Keywords

Calcium signalling; extracellular ATP; guanylate cyclase; nitrate reductase; pollen germination

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [IBN-0344221, IOS-0718890]

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Plant and animal cells release or secrete ATP by various mechanisms, and this activity allows extracellular ATP to serve as a signalling molecule. Recent reports suggest that extracellular ATP induces plant responses ranging from increased cytosolic calcium to changes in auxin transport, xenobiotic resistance, pollen germination, and growth. Although calcium has been identified as a secondary messenger for the extracellular ATP signal, other parts of this signal transduction chain remain unknown. Increasing the extracellular concentration of ATP gamma S, a poorly-hydrolysable ATP analogue, inhibited both pollen germination and pollen tube elongation, while the addition of AMPS had no effect. Because pollen tube elongation is also sensitive to nitric oxide, this raised the possibility that a connection exists between the two pathways. Four approaches were used to test whether the germination and growth effects of extracellular ATP gamma S were transduced via nitric oxide. The results showed that increases in extracellular ATP gamma S induced increases in cellular nitric oxide, chemical agonists of the nitric oxide signalling pathway lowered the threshold of extracellular ATP gamma S that inhibits pollen germination, an antagonist of guanylate cyclase, which can inhibit some nitric oxide signalling pathways, blocked the ATP gamma S-induced inhibition of both pollen germination and pollen tube elongation, and the effects of applied ATP gamma S were blocked in nia1nia2 mutants, which have diminished NO production. The concurrence of these four data sets support the conclusion that the suppression of pollen germination and pollen tube elongation by extracellular nucleotides is mediated in part via the nitric oxide signalling pathway.

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