5 Calcium Signals and Their Regulation

Annual Plant Reviews book series, Volume 33: Intracellular Signaling in Plants
Zhen-Ming Pei

Zhen-Ming Pei

Department of Biology, Duke University, Box 90338, Durham, NC, 27708 USA

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Simon Gilroy

Simon Gilroy

Botany Department, University of Wisconsin, Birge Hall, 430 Lincoln Drive, Madison, WI, 53706 USA

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First published: 24 April 2018
This article was originally published in 2008 in Intracellular Signaling in Plants, Volume 33 (ISBN 9781405160025) of the Annual Plant Reviews book series, this volume edited by Zhenbiao Yang. The article was republished in Annual Plant Reviews online in April 2018.

Abstract

Calcium is recognized as a ubiquitous cellular regulator and changes in cytosolic Ca2+ levels are known to be involved in plant processes as diverse as response to cold shock, hormone action, and touch signaling. The specificity of subsequent cellular response appears to be encoded, at least in part, in the temporal and spatial dynamics of the Ca2+ change and the spectrum of Ca2+-responsive proteins expressed in the cell. In this chapter we review the evidence for the informational content of the Ca2+ signal in plant cells and discuss our current knowledge of the channel and pump systems that shape these Ca2+ changes. We will also use the Ca2+-dependent Nod-factor signaling system that underlies rhizobium:plant interactions to highlight our current understanding of how the Ca2+ change may be transduced to the appropriate cellular response. In addition we use the example of Ca2+ uptake from soil and its subsequent translocation through the plant to show how, in addition to its role in cell signaling, this ion can act as a long-range messenger, integrating the cellular activity of the stomatal guard cell with water and nutrient uptake activities in the root. The theme that emerges from these examples is that although Ca2+ is involved in regulating a remarkably diverse array of plant processes, the more we understand about the systems that generate and respond to these Ca2+ changes, the more we realize just how sophisticated the molecular networks that encode and decode them turn out to be.

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