4.5 Article

Rapid movements in plants

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT RESEARCH
Volume 134, Issue 1, Pages 3-17

Publisher

SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s10265-020-01243-7

Keywords

Electrical signal; Ion transport; Mechanosensing; Rapid movement; Structure; Water transport

Categories

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [JP15K14555, JP16K07411, JP16K14761, JP17H06390, JP19K06715]
  2. JST, PRESTO [JPMJPR194A]

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Plant movements can be slow or rapid, with mechanisms including turgor pressure and muscle contraction. Stomata movement is a well-studied model for turgor-driven movement. Rapid multicellular movements require fast cell-cell communication and mechanosensing systems.
Plant movements are generally slow, but some plant species have evolved the ability to move very rapidly at speeds comparable to those of animals. Whereas movement in animals relies on the contraction machinery of muscles, many plant movements use turgor pressure as the primary driving force together with secondarily generated elastic forces. The movement of stomata is the best-characterized model system for studying turgor-driven movement, and many gene products responsible for this movement, especially those related to ion transport, have been identified. Similar gene products were recently shown to function in the daily sleep movements of pulvini, the motor organs for macroscopic leaf movements. However, it is difficult to explain the mechanisms behind rapid multicellular movements as a simple extension of the mechanisms used for unicellular or slow movements. For example, water transport through plant tissues imposes a limit on the speed of plant movements, which becomes more severe as the size of the moving part increases. Rapidly moving traps in carnivorous plants overcome this limitation with the aid of the mechanical behaviors of their three-dimensional structures. In addition to a mechanism for rapid deformation, rapid multicellular movements also require a molecular system for rapid cell-cell communication, along with a mechanosensing system that initiates the response. Electrical activities similar to animal action potentials are found in many plant species, representing promising candidates for the rapid cell-cell signaling behind rapid movements, but the molecular entities of these electrical signals remain obscure. Here we review the current understanding of rapid plant movements with the aim of encouraging further biological studies into this fascinating, challenging topic.

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