Journal article
2004
APA
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Dutta, R., & Robinson, K. (2004). Identification and Characterization of Stretch-Activated Ion Channels in Pollen Protoplasts.
Chicago/Turabian
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Dutta, R., and K. Robinson. “Identification and Characterization of Stretch-Activated Ion Channels in Pollen Protoplasts” (2004).
MLA
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Dutta, R., and K. Robinson. Identification and Characterization of Stretch-Activated Ion Channels in Pollen Protoplasts. 2004.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{r2004a,
title = {Identification and Characterization of Stretch-Activated Ion Channels in Pollen Protoplasts},
year = {2004},
author = {Dutta, R. and Robinson, K.}
}
Pollen tube growth requires a Ca gradient, with elevated levels of cytosolic Ca at the growing tip. This gradient’s magnitude oscillates with growth oscillation but is always maintained. Ca influx into the growing tip is necessary, and its magnitude also oscillates with growth. It has been widely assumed that stretch-activated Ca channels underlie this influx, but such channels have never been reported in either pollen grains or pollen tubes. We have identified and characterized stretch-activated Ca channels from Lilium longiflorum pollen grain and tube tip protoplasts. The channels were localized to a small region of the grain protoplasts associated with the site of tube germination. In addition, we find a stretch-activated K channel as well as a spontaneous K channel distributed over the entire grain surface, but neither was present at the germination site or at the tip. Neither stretch-activated channel was detected in the grain protoplasts unless the grains were left in germination medium for at least 1 h before protoplast preparation. The stretch-activated channels were inhibited by a spider venom that is known to block stretch-activated channels in animal cells, but the spontaneous channel was unaffected by the venom. The venom also stopped pollen tube germination and elongation and blocked Ca entry into the growing tip, suggesting that channel function is necessary for growth.