@article{oai:kitami-it.repo.nii.ac.jp:00008869, author = {林, 村 and 角野, 貴志 and 鈴木, 拓 and 吉塚, 和治 and 古市, 卓也 and 陽川, 憲 and 河野, 智謙}, issue = {2}, journal = {低温生物工学会誌, Cryobiology and Cryotechnology}, month = {}, note = {The temperature is one of the key environmental factors surrounding the living organisms in nature. In plant cells, transient increase in cytosolic Ca^<2+> concentration ([Ca^<2+>]_c) occurs as a response to an acute temperature change. Such a rise in [Ca^<2+>]_c reportedly leads to cold acclimatization. Here, we examined the effect of the temperature- shifts from ambient to the lower or higher temperatures, on induction of [Ca^<2+>]_c increases, using suspension-cultured plant cell lines expressing aequorin, a luminescent [Ca^<2+>]_c-reporter. The cultures used here include three tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) cell lines, namely BY-2, Bel-W3 (O_3-sensitive) and Bel-B (O_3-tolerant), and rice (Oryza sativa L., cv. Nipponbare) AQ7 cells. Generally, rice cells and tobacco cells behaved similarly. The levels of [Ca^<2+>]_c spikes induced by cold shock were much greater than those induced by heat shock in all cell lines tested. Effects of inhibitors suggested that the cold shock-induced [Ca^<2+>]_c spike requires the uptake of extracellular Ca^<2+> via plasma membrane Ca^<2+> channels, while the heat shock response might be due to channel-independent leakages of extracellular and organelle Ca^<2+> into cytoplasm.}, pages = {83--89}, title = {Mechanism for temperature-shift-responsive acute Ca^<2+> uptake in suspension-cultured tobacco and rice cells}, volume = {52}, year = {2006} }