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JXB Advance Access published online on January 30, 2009

Journal of Experimental Botany, doi:10.1093/jxb/ern340
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© The Author [2009]. Published by Oxford University Press [on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology]. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

REVIEW-ARTICLE

The guard cell as a single-cell model towards understanding drought tolerance and abscisic acid action

Caroline Sirichandra, Aleksandra Wasilewska, Florina Vlad, Christiane Valon and Jeffrey Leung*

Institut des Sciences du Végetal, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, UPR2355, 1 Avenue de la Terrasse, Bât. 23, 91190 Gif-sur-Yvette, France

* To whom correspondence should be addressed: leung{at}isv.cnrs-gif.fr

Stomatal guard cells are functionally specialized epidermal cells usually arranged in pairs surrounding a pore. Changes in ion fluxes, and more specifically osmolytes, within the guard cells drive opening/closing of the pore, allowing gas exchange while limiting water loss through evapo-transpiration. Adjustments of the pore aperture to optimize these conflicting needs are thus centrally important for land plants to survive, especially with the rise in CO2 associated with global warming and increasing water scarcity this century. The basic biophysical events in modulating membrane transport have been gradually delineated over two decades. Genetics and molecular approaches in recent years have complemented and extended these earlier studies to identify major regulatory nodes. In Arabidopsis, the reference for guard cell genetics, stomatal opening driven by K+ entry is mainly through KAT1 and KAT2, two voltage-gated K+ inward-rectifying channels that are activated on hyperpolarization of the plasma membrane principally by the OST2 H+-ATPase (proton pump coupled to ATP hydrolysis). By contrast, stomatal closing is caused by K+ efflux mainly through GORK, the outward-rectifying channel activated by membrane depolarization. The depolarization is most likely initiated by SLAC1, an anion channel distantly related to the dicarboxylate/malic acid transport protein found in fungi and bacteria. Beyond this established framework, there is also burgeoning evidence for the involvement of additional transporters, such as homologues to the multi-drug resistance proteins (or ABC transporters) as intimated by several pharmacological and reverse genetics studies. General inhibitors of protein kinases and protein phosphatases have been shown to profoundly affect guard cell membrane transport properties. Indeed, the first regulatory enzymes underpinning these transport processes revealed genetically were several protein phosphatases of the 2C class and the OST1 kinase, a member of the SnRK2 family. Taken together, these results are providing the first glimpses of an emerging signalling complex critical for modulating the stomatal aperture in response to environmental stimuli.

Key words: Abscisic acid, drought, guard cells, light, protein phosphorylation

Received 26 September 2008; Revised 28 November 2008 Accepted 2 December 2008


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Type 2C protein phosphatases directly regulate abscisic acid-activated protein kinases in Arabidopsis
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