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Dive into the research topics where Rainer Hedrich is active.

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Featured researches published by Rainer Hedrich.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Activity of guard cell anion channel SLAC1 is controlled by drought-stress signaling kinase-phosphatase pair

Dietmar Geiger; Sönke Scherzer; Patrick Mumm; Annette Stange; Irene Marten; Hubert Bauer; Peter Ache; Susanne Matschi; Anja Liese; Khaled A. S. Al-Rasheid; Tina Romeis; Rainer Hedrich

In response to drought stress the phytohormone ABA (abscisic acid) induces stomatal closure and, therein, activates guard cell anion channels in a calcium-dependent as well as-independent manner. Two key components of the ABA signaling pathway are the protein kinase OST1 (open stomata 1) and the protein phosphatase ABI1 (ABA insensitive 1). The recently identified guard cell anion channel SLAC1 appeared to be the key ion channel in this signaling pathway but remained electrically silent when expressed heterologously. Using split YFP assays, we identified OST1 as an interaction partner of SLAC1 and ABI1. Upon coexpression of SLAC1 with OST1 in Xenopus oocytes, SLAC1-related anion currents appeared similar to those observed in guard cells. Integration of ABI1 into the SLAC1/OST1 complex, however, prevented SLAC1 activation. Our studies demonstrate that SLAC1 represents the slow, deactivating, weak voltage-dependent anion channel of guard cells controlled by phosphorylation/dephosphorylation.


Cell and Tissue Research | 2001

Identification of a novel, multifunctional beta-defensin (human beta-defensin 3) with specific antimicrobial activity. Its interaction with plasma membranes of Xenopus oocytes and the induction of macrophage chemoattraction.

José-Ramón García; Florian Jaumann; Sandra Schulz; Alexander Krause; Javier Rodríguez-Jiménez; Ulf Forssmann; Knut Adermann; Enno Klüver; Claus Vogelmeier; Dirk Becker; Rainer Hedrich; Wolf-Georg Forssmann; Robert Bals

Abstract. Previous studies have shown the implication of β-defensins in host defense of the human body. The human β-defensins 1 and 2 (hBD-1, hBD-2) have been isolated by biochemical methods. Here we report the identification of a third human β-defensin, called human β-defensin 3 (hBD-3; cDNA sequence, Genbank accession no. AF295370), based on bioinformatics and functional genomic analysis. Expression of hBD-3 is detected throughout epithelia of many organs and in non-epithelial tissues. In contrast to hBD-2, which is upregulated by microorganisms or tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), hBD-3 expression is increased particularly after stimulation by interferon-γ. Synthetic hBD-3 exhibits a strong antimicrobial activity against gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria and fungi, including Burkholderia cepacia. In addition, hBD-3 activates monocytes and elicits ion channel activity in biomembranes, specifically in oocytes of Xenopus laevis. This paper also shows that screening of genomic sequences is a valuable tool with which to identify novel regulatory peptides. Human β-defensins represent a family of antimicrobial peptides differentially expressed in most tissues, regulated by specific mechanisms, and exerting physiological functions not only related to direct host defense.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Guard cell anion channel SLAC1 is regulated by CDPK protein kinases with distinct Ca2+ affinities

Dietmar Geiger; Sönke Scherzer; Patrick Mumm; Irene Marten; Peter Ache; Susanne Matschi; Anja Liese; C. Wellmann; Khaled A. S. Al-Rasheid; Erwin Grill; Tina Romeis; Rainer Hedrich

In response to drought stress, the phytohormone abscisic acid (ABA) induces stomatal closure. Thereby the stress hormone activates guard cell anion channels in a calcium-dependent, as well as –independent, manner. Open stomata 1 protein kinase (OST1) and ABI1 protein phosphatase (ABA insensitive 1) represent key components of calcium-independent ABA signaling. Recently, the guard cell anion channel SLAC1 was identified. When expressed heterologously SLAC1 remained electrically silent. Upon coexpression with Ca2+-independent OST1, however, SLAC1 anion channels appear activated in an ABI1-dependent manner. Mutants lacking distinct calcium-dependent protein kinases (CPKs) appeared impaired in ABA stimulation of guard cell ion channels, too. To study SLAC1 activation via the calcium-dependent ABA pathway, we studied the SLAC1 response to CPKs in the Xenopus laevis oocyte system. Split YFP-based protein–protein interaction assays, using SLAC1 as the bait, identified guard cell expressed CPK21 and 23 as major interacting partners. Upon coexpression of SLAC1 with CPK21 and 23, anion currents document SLAC1 stimulation by these guard cell protein kinases. Ca2+-sensitive activation of SLAC1, however, could be assigned to the CPK21 pathway only because CPK23 turned out to be rather Ca2+-insensitive. In line with activation by OST1, CPK activation of the guard cell anion channel was suppressed by ABI1. Thus the CPK and OST1 branch of ABA signal transduction in guard cells seem to converge on the level of SLAC1 under the control of the ABI1/ABA-receptor complex.


The EMBO Journal | 1990

Ca2+ and nucleotide dependent regulation of voltage dependent anion channels in the plasma membrane of guard cells.

Rainer Hedrich; H. Busch; K. Raschke

Using the patch‐clamp technique we discovered that the voltage dependent anion channels in the plasma membrane of guard cells are activated by a rise in cytoplasmic Ca2+ in the presence of nucleotides. Upon activation, these anion channels catalyse anion currents 10‐20 times higher than in the inactivated state, thus shifting the plasma membrane from a K+ conducting state to an anion conducting state. Prolonged stimulation by depolarizing voltages results in the inactivation of the anion current (t1/2 = 10‐12 s). We suggest that activation of the anion channel by Ca2+ and nucleotides is a key event in the regulation of salt efflux from guard cells during stomatal closure.


Planta | 1991

Stretch-activated chloride, potassium, and calcium channels coexisting in plasma membranes of guard cells of Vicia faba L.

Daniel J. Cosgrove; Rainer Hedrich

Mechanosensitive ion channels in the plasma membrane of Vicia faba guard cell protoplasts were studied by use of the patch clamp technique. Stretch-activated (SA) channels in outside-out patches were analyzed for channel conductance, kinetics and ion selectivity. We found three distinct SA channels, permeable to Cl−, K+ and Ca2+ and distinguishable from spontaneous (non-SA) channels for these ions on the basis of conductance, kinetics, and voltage-dependence, as well as sensitivity to membrane stretch. In the attached patch configuration, light suction (2 to 10 kPa) reversibly induced channel opening with multiple amplitudes and complex kinetics. The open probability for SA channels increased nonlinearly with pipette suction. In guard cells in situ, these SA channels may mediate ion transport across the plasma membrane directly, as well as influence the activity of non-SA channels via effects on membrane voltage and cytoplasmic calcium. Through such effects, SA channels likely influence volume and turgor regulation of guard cells, and thereby control of leaf gas exchange.


FEBS Letters | 2000

GORK, a delayed outward rectifier expressed in guard cells of Arabidopsis thaliana, is a K(+)-selective, K(+)-sensing ion channel.

Peter Ache; Dirk Becker; Natalya Ivashikina; Petra Dietrich; M. Rob G. Roelfsema; Rainer Hedrich

Here we report on the molecular identification, guard cell expression and functional characterization of AtGORK, an Arabidopsis thaliana goutward rectifying K+ channel. GORK represents a new member of the plant Shaker K+ channel superfamily. When heterologously expressed in Xenopus oocytes the gene product of GORK mediated depolarization‐activated K+ currents. In agreement with the delayed outward rectifier in intact guard cells and protoplasts thereof, GORK is activated in a voltage‐ and potassium‐dependent manner. Furthermore, the single channel conductance and regulation of GORK in response to pH changes resembles the biophysical properties of the guard cell delayed outward rectifier. Thus GORK very likely represents the molecular entity for depolarization‐induced potassium release from guard cells.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Perception of the Arabidopsis danger signal peptide 1 involves the pattern recognition receptor AtPEPR1 and its close homologue AtPEPR2

Elzbieta Krol; Tobias Mentzel; Delphine Chinchilla; Thomas Boller; Georg Felix; Birgit Kemmerling; Sandra Postel; Michael Arents; Elena Jeworutzki; Khaled A. S. Al-Rasheid; Dirk Becker; Rainer Hedrich

Plasma membrane-borne pattern recognition receptors, which recognize microbe-associated molecular patterns and endogenous damage-associated molecular patterns, provide the first line of defense in innate immunity. In plants, leucine-rich repeat receptor kinases fulfill this role, as exemplified by FLS2 and EFR, the receptors for the microbe-associated molecular patterns flagellin and elongation factor Tu. Here we examined the perception of the damage-associated molecular pattern peptide 1 (AtPep1), an endogenous peptide of Arabidopsis identified earlier and shown to be perceived by the leucine-rich repeat protein kinase PEPR1. Using seedling growth inhibition, elicitation of an oxidative burst and induction of ethylene biosynthesis, we show that wild type plants and the pepr1 and pepr2 mutants, affected in PEPR1 and in its homologue PEPR2, are sensitive to AtPep1, but that the double mutant pepr1/pepr2 is completely insensitive. As a central body of our study, we provide electrophysiological evidence that at the level of the plasma membrane, AtPep1 triggers a receptor-dependent transient depolarization through activation of plasma membrane anion channels, and that this effect is absent in the double mutant pepr1/pepr2. The double mutant also fails to respond to AtPep2 and AtPep3, two distant homologues of AtPep1 on the basis of homology screening, implying that the PEPR1 and PEPR2 are responsible for their perception too. Our findings provide a basic framework to study the biological role of AtPep1-related danger signals and their cognate receptors.


Trends in Plant Science | 2014

A unified nomenclature of NITRATE TRANSPORTER 1/PEPTIDE TRANSPORTER family members in plants

Sophie Léran; Kranthi Varala; Jean Christophe Boyer; Maurizio Chiurazzi; Nigel M. Crawford; Françoise Daniel-Vedele; Laure C. David; Rebecca Dickstein; Emilio Fernández; Brian G. Forde; Walter Gassmann; Dietmar Geiger; Alain Gojon; Ji Ming Gong; Barbara Ann Halkier; Jeanne M. Harris; Rainer Hedrich; Anis M. Limami; Doris Rentsch; Mitsunori Seo; Yi-Fang Tsay; Mingyong Zhang; Gloria M. Coruzzi; Benoît Lacombe

Members of the plant NITRATE TRANSPORTER 1/PEPTIDE TRANSPORTER (NRT1/PTR) family display protein sequence homology with the SLC15/PepT/PTR/POT family of peptide transporters in animals. In comparison to their animal and bacterial counterparts, these plant proteins transport a wide variety of substrates: nitrate, peptides, amino acids, dicarboxylates, glucosinolates, IAA, and ABA. The phylogenetic relationship of the members of the NRT1/PTR family in 31 fully sequenced plant genomes allowed the identification of unambiguous clades, defining eight subfamilies. The phylogenetic tree was used to determine a unified nomenclature of this family named NPF, for NRT1/PTR FAMILY. We propose that the members should be named accordingly: NPFX.Y, where X denotes the subfamily and Y the individual member within the species.


Science Signaling | 2011

Stomatal Closure by Fast Abscisic Acid Signaling Is Mediated by the Guard Cell Anion Channel SLAH3 and the Receptor RCAR1

Dietmar Geiger; Tobias Maierhofer; Khaled A. S. Al-Rasheid; Sönke Scherzer; Patrick Mumm; Anja Liese; Peter Ache; Christian Wellmann; Irene Marten; Erwin Grill; Tina Romeis; Rainer Hedrich

Plant survival during periods of drought may involve SLAH3, a nitrate-conducting anion channel activated by abscisic acid. Conducting Closure Stomata are pores in the plant epidermis that allow the movement of CO2 into the plant concomitant with the loss of water. The opening and closing of these pores is mediated by the surrounding guard cells, which respond to drought, nutrient availability, and the plant stress hormone abscisic acid (ABA). Geiger et al. identified the anion channel SLAH3 as a player in the guard cell pathway downstream of ABA and defined its mode of regulation through an ABA receptor–phosphatase RCAR1-ABI complex and a calcium-dependent kinase, CPK21. Unlike previously characterized anion channels that are regulated by ABA and contribute to stomatal closure, activation of SLAH3 was promoted by nitrate and was 20 times as permeable to nitrate ions as to chloride ions. Thus, SLAH3 may integrate nitrate signaling and metabolism with signals initiated by drought conditions to control respiration and water loss. S-type anion channels are direct targets of abscisic acid (ABA) signaling and contribute to chloride and nitrate release from guard cells, which in turn initiates stomatal closure. SLAC1 was the first component of the guard cell S-type anion channel identified. However, we found that guard cells of Arabidopsis SLAC1 mutants exhibited nitrate conductance. SLAH3 (SLAC1 homolog 3) was also present in guard cells, and coexpression of SLAH3 with the calcium ion (Ca2+)–dependent kinase CPK21 in Xenopus oocytes mediated nitrate-induced anion currents. Nitrate, calcium, and phosphorylation regulated SLAH3 activity. CPK21-dependent SLAH3 phosphorylation and activation were blocked by ABI1, a PP2C-type protein phosphatase that is inhibited by ABA and inhibits the ABA signaling pathway in guard cells. We reconstituted the ABA-stimulated phosphorylation of the SLAH3 amino-terminal domain by CPK21 in vitro by including the ABA receptor–phosphatase complex RCAR1-ABI1 in the reactions. We propose that ABA perception by the complex consisting of ABA receptors of the RCAR/PYR/PYL family and ABI1 releases CPK21 from inhibition by ABI1, and then CPK21 is further activated by an increase in the cytosolic Ca2+ concentration, leading to its phosphorylation of SLAH3. Thus, the identification of SLAH3 as the nitrate-, calcium-, and ABA-sensitive guard cell anion channel provides insights into the relationship among stomatal response to drought, signaling by nitrate, and nitrate metabolism.


Current Biology | 2013

The Stomatal Response to Reduced Relative Humidity Requires Guard Cell-Autonomous ABA Synthesis

Hubert Bauer; Peter Ache; Silke Lautner; Joerg Fromm; Wolfram Hartung; Khaled A. S. Al-Rasheid; Sophia Sonnewald; Uwe Sonnewald; Susanne Kneitz; Nicole Lachmann; Ralf R. Mendel; Florian Bittner; Alistair M. Hetherington; Rainer Hedrich

Stomata are pores on the leaf surface, bounded by two guard cells, which control the uptake of CO(2) for photosynthesis and the concomitant loss of water vapor. In 1898, Francis Darwin showed that stomata close in response to reduced atmospheric relative humidity (rh); however, our understanding of the signaling pathway responsible for coupling changes in rh to alterations in stomatal aperture is fragmentary. The results presented here highlight the primacy of abscisic acid (ABA) in the stomatal response to drying air. We show that guard cells possess the entire ABA biosynthesis pathway and that it appears upregulated by positive feedback by ABA. When wild-type Arabidopsis and the ABA-deficient mutant aba3-1 were exposed to reductions in rh, the aba3-1 mutant wilted, whereas the wild-type did not. However, when aba3-1 plants, in which ABA synthesis had been specifically rescued in guard cells, were challenged with dry air, they did not wilt. These data indicate that guard cell-autonomous ABA synthesis is required for and is sufficient for stomatal closure in response to low rh. Guard cell-autonomous ABA synthesis allows the plant to tailor leaf gas exchange exquisitely to suit the prevailing environmental conditions.

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