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Electrophysiology of turgor regulation in marine siphonous green algae

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE BIOLOGY
Volume 211, Issue 1, Pages 1-14

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00232-006-0860-1

Keywords

turgor; electrophysiology of plants; cell signaling; transport physiology; ion and water transport in plants; cell physiology; green algae; osmotic stress; cell structure

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We review electrophysiological measures of turgor regulation in some siphonous green algae, primarily the giant-celled marine algae, Valonia and Ventricaria, with particular comparison to the well studied charophyte algae Chara and Lamprothamnium. The siphonous green algae have a less negative plasma membrane potential, and are unlikely to have a proton-based chemiosmotic transport system, dominated by active electrogenic K+ uptake. We also make note of the unusual cellular structure of the siphonous green algae. Hypertonic stress, due to increased external osmotic pressure, is accompanied by positive-going potential difference (PD), increase in conductance, and slow turgor regulation. The relationship between these is not yet resolved, but may involve changes in K+ conductance (G(K)) or active K+ transport at both membranes. Hypotonic turgor regulation, in response to decreased external osmotic pressure, is similar to 3 times faster than hypertonic turgor regulation. It is accompanied by a negative-going PD, although conductance also increases. The conductance increase and the magnitude of the PD change are strongly correlated with the magnitude of hypotonic stress.

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