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Relationship of Transplasmalemma Redox Activity to Proton and Solute Transport by Roots of <i>Zea mays</i>
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1986
Year
Redox SignalingMembrane PotentialPlasmalemma Redox ActivityBiochemistryRedox RegulatorNatural SciencesTransplasmalemma Redox ActivityPhysiologyPlant MetabolismRedox BiologySolute TransportChemistryMetabolismMedicineChemical KineticsRedox ActivityOxidative Stress
Transplasmalemma redox activity, monitored in the presence of exogenous ferricyanide stimulates net H(+) excretion and inhibits the uptake of K(+) and alpha-aminoisobutyric acid by freshly cut or washed, apical and subapical root segments of corn (Zea mays L. cv "Seneca Chief"). H(+) excretion is seen only following a lag of about 5 minutes after ferricyanide addition, even though the reduction of ferricyanide occurs before 5 minutes and continues linearly. Once detected, the enhanced rate of H(+) excretion is retarded by the ATPase inhibitors N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, diethylstilbestrol, and vanadate. A model is presented in which plasmalemma redox activity in the presence of ferricyanide involves the transport only of electrons across the plasmalemma, resulting in a depolarization of the membrane potential and activation of an H(+)-ATPase. Such a model implies that this class of redox activity does not provide an additional and independent pathway for H(+) transport, but that the activity may be an important regulator of H(+) excretion. The 90% inhibition of K(+) ((86)Rb(+)) uptake within 2 minutes after ferricyanide addition can be contrasted with the 5 to 15% inhibition of uptake of alpha-aminoisobutyric acid. The possibility exists that a portion of the K(+) and most of the alpha-aminoisobutyric acid uptake inhibitions are related to the ferricyanide-induced depolarization of the membrane potential, but that the redox state of some component of the K(+) uptake system may also regulate K(+) fluxes.