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Annual Reviews, Annual Review of Physiology, 1(71), p. 59-82, 2009

DOI: 10.1146/annurev.physiol.010908.163204

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Plant Ion Channels: Gene Families, Physiology, and Functional Genomics Analyses

Journal article published in 2009 by John M. Ward, Pascal Mäser ORCID, Julian I. Schroeder
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Distinct potassium, anion, and calcium channels in the plasma membrane and vacuolar membrane of plant cells have been identified and characterized by patch clamping. Primarily owing to advances in Arabidopsis genetics and genomics, and yeast functional complementation, many of the corresponding genes have been identified. Recent advances in our understanding of ion channel genes that mediate signal transduction and ion transport are discussed here. Some plant ion channels, for example, ALMT and SLAC anion channel subunits, are unique. The majority of plant ion channel families exhibit homology to animal genes; such families include both hyperpolarization- and depolarization-activated Shaker-type potassium channels, CLC chloride transporters/channels, cyclic nucleotide–gated channels, and ionotropic glutamate receptor homologs. These plant ion channels offer unique opportunities to analyze the structural mechanisms and functions of ion channels. Here we review gene families of selected plant ion channel classes and discuss unique structure-function aspects and their physiological roles in plant cell signaling and transport.