4.8 Article

Calcium-dependent protein kinases regulate polarized tip growth in pollen tubes

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 59, Issue 4, Pages 528-539

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-313X.2009.03894.x

Keywords

calcium; kinase; calmodulin; hapless; male sterile; tropism

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01GM070813]
  2. National Science Foundation [MCB-0114769, DBI-0436450]
  3. Direct For Biological Sciences
  4. Div Of Molecular and Cellular Bioscience [0920624] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Calcium signals are critical for the regulation of polarized growth in many eukaryotic cells, including pollen tubes and neurons. In plants, the regulatory pathways that code and decode Ca2+ signals are poorly understood. In Arabidopsis thaliana, genetic evidence presented here indicates that pollen tube tip growth involves the redundant activity of two Ca2+-dependent protein kinases (CPKs), isoforms CPK17 and -34. Both isoforms appear to target to the plasma membrane, as shown by imaging of CPK17-yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) and CPK34-YFP in growing pollen tubes. Segregation analyses from two independent sets of T-DNA insertion mutants indicate that a double disruption of CPK17 and -34 results in an approximately 350-fold reduction in pollen transmission efficiency. The near sterile phenotype of homozygous double mutants could be rescued through pollen expression of a CPK34-YFP fusion. In contrast, a transgene rescue was blocked by mutations engineered to disrupt the Ca2+-activation mechanism of CPK34 (CPK34-YFP-E465A, E500A), providing in vivo evidence linking Ca2+ activation to a biological function of a CPK. While double mutant pollen tubes displayed normal morphology, relative growth rates for the most rapidly growing tubes were reduced by more than three-fold compared with wild type. In addition, while most mutant tubes appeared to grow far enough to reach ovules, the vast majority (> 90%) still failed to locate and fertilize ovules. Together, these results provide genetic evidence that CPKs are essential to pollen fitness, and support a mechanistic model in which CPK17 and -34 transduce Ca2+ signals to increase the rate of pollen tube tip growth and facilitate a response to tropism cues.

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