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Research Paper
Pharmacological Evidence for Calcium Involvement in the Long-Term Processing of Abiotic Stimuli in Plants
Marie-Claire Verdus, Lois Le Sceller, Victor Norris, Michel Thellier and Camille RIPOLL
volume 2 | issue 4
july/august 2007Pages: 212 - 220
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Information about abiotic conditions is stored for long periods in plants and, in flax seedlings, can lead to the production of meristems. To investigate the underlying mechanism, flax seedlings were given abiotic stimuli that included a mechanical stimulus (by manipulation), one or two cold shocks, a slow cold treatment and a drought stress and, if these seedlings were then subjected to a temporary (1 to 3 days) depletion of calcium, epidermal meristems were produced in the seedling hypocotyls. This production was inhibited by the addition to the nutrient media of EGTA, ruthenium red, lanthanum or gadolinium that affect calcium availability or calcium transport. Use of these agents revealed a period of vulnerability in information processing that was less than 2 min for mechanical stimuli and over 5 min for other abiotic stimuli, consistent with information about mechanical stimuli being stored particularly fast. We propose that external calcium is needed for the transduction/storage of the information for meristem production whilst a temporary depletion of external calcium is needed for the actual production of meristems. Such roles for calcium would be consistent with a mechanism based on ion condensation on charged polymers.
Authors
Marie-Claire Verdus
University of Rouen; Normandie France
Lois Le Sceller
University of Rouen; Normandie France
Victor Norris
University of Rouen; Normandie France
Michel Thellier
University of Rouen; Normandie France
Camille RIPOLL
University of Rouen; Normandie France
We now provide open access to journal articles published online for one year or more. This article may be downloaded at the following link:
If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.




