K+ transport properties of K+ channels in the plasma membrane of Vicia faba guard cells.
Open Access
- 1 November 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 92 (5) , 667-683
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.92.5.667
Abstract
Electrical properties of the plasma membrane of guard cell protoplasts isolated from stomates of Vicia faba leaves were studied by application of the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique. The two types of K+ currents that have recently been identified in guard cells may allow efflux of K+ during stomatal closing, and uptake of K+ during stomatal opening (Schroeder et al., 1987). A detailed characterization of ion transport properties of the inward-rectifying (IK+,in) and the outward-rectifying (IK+,ou5) K+ conductance is presented here. The permeability ratios of IK+,in and IK+,ou5 currents for K+ over monovalent alkali metal ions were determined. The resulting permeability sequences (PK+ > PRb+ > PNa+ .mchgt. PCs+) corresponded closely to the ion specificity of guard cell movements in V. faba. Neither K+ currents exhibited significant inactivation when K+ channels were activated for prolonged periods (> 10 min). The absence of inactivation may permit long durations of K+ fluxes, which occur during guard cell movements. Activation potentials of inward K+ currents were not shifted when external K+ concentrations were changed. This differs strongly from the behavior of inward-rectifying K+ channels in animal tissue. Blue light and fusicoccin induce hyperpolarization by stimulation of an electrogenic pump. From slow-whole-cell recordings it was concluded that electrogenic pumps require cytoplasmic substrates for full activation and that the magnitude of the pump current is sufficient to drive K+ uptake through IK+,in channels. First, direct evidence was gained for the hypothesis that IK+,in channels are a molecular pathway for K+ accumulation by the finding that IK+,in was blocked by Al3+ ions, which are known to inhibit stomatal opening but not closing. The results presented in this study strongly support a prominent role for KK+,out channels in K+ transport across the plasma membrane of guard cells.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
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