Agriculture Reference
In-Depth Information
20 Slow Wave Potentials -
a Propagating Electrical Signal
Unique to Higher Plants
Rainer Stahlberg, Robert E. Cleland,
Elizabeth Van Volkenburgh
Abstract Plants have at least three kinds of propagating electrical signals. In addition to
a sustained wound potential (WP) that stops a few millimeters from dying cells, these sig-
nals are action potentials (APs) and slow wave potentials (SWPs). All three signals consist
of a transient change in the membrane potential of plant cells (depolarization and subse-
quent repolarization), but only SWPs and APs make use of the vascular bundles to achieve
a potentially systemic spread through the entire plant. The principal difference used to
differentiate SWPs from APs is that SWPs show longer, delayed repolarizations. Unfortu-
nately, SWP repolarizations also show a large range of variation that makes a distinction
difficult. SWPs and APs do differ more clearly, however, in the causal factors stimulating
their appearance, the ionic mechanisms of their depolarization and repolarization phases
as well as the mechanisms and pathways of propagation. The depolarizations of a SWP
arisewithanincreaseinturgorpressurecellsexperienceinthewakeofahydraulicpres-
sure wave that spreads through the xylem conduits after rain, embolism, bending, local
wounds, organ excision and local burning. The generation of APs occurs under different
environmental and internal influences (e.g. touch, light changes, cold treatment, cell expan-
sion) that - mediated through varying generator potentials - trigger a voltage-dependent
depolarization spike in an all-or-nothing manner. While APs and WPs can be triggered
in excised organs, SWPs depend on the pressure difference between the atmosphere and
an intact plant interior. High humidity and prolonged darkness will also suppress SWP
signaling. The ionic mechanism of the SWP is thought to involve a transient shutdown of
aP-typeH + -ATPase in the plasma membrane and differs from the mechanism underlying
APs. Another defining characteristic of SWPs is the hydraulic mode of propagation that
enables them - but not APs - to pass through killed or poisoned areas. Unlike APs they
can easily communicate between leaf and stem. SWPs can move in both directions of the
plant axis, while their amplitudes show a decrement of about 2.5% cm −1 and move with
speeds that can be slower than APs in darkness and faster in bright light. The SWPs move
with a rapid pressure increase that establishes an axial pressure gradient in the xylem. This
gradient translates distance (perhaps via changing kinetics in the rise of turgor pressure)
into increasing lag phases for the pressure-induced depolarizations in the epidermis cells.
Haberlandt (1890), after studying propagating responses in Mimosa pudica ,suggestedthe
existence of hydraulically propagated electric potentials at a time when only APs were con-
ceivable. It took a century to realize that such signals do exist and that they coincide with
the characteristics of SWPs rather than those of APs. Moreover, we begin to understand
that SWPs are not only ubiquitous among higher plants but represent a unique, defining
characteristic without parallels in lower plants or animals.
 
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