PLANT AND CELL PHYSIOLOGY, v.58, no.7, pp.1121 - 1125
Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Abstract
Signaling between and within cells involves reversible changes
in the activity of chemicals, ions, metabolites and proteins. In
this Special Focus Issue we have collected new articles investigating
the function of biological sensors that detect these
changes that occur during signaling. The Editors were keen
also to seek the contribution of articles describing the development
and use of man-made sensors to measure the in vivo
dynamic changes in metabolites and second messengers.
Sensors are components that detect, through binding, alterations
in the environment, and transduce those alterations to an
output. Endogenous cellular sensors that evoke biological
responses and man-made sensors used by the experimentalist
to measure signaling events should be capable of quantitative
measurement of dynamic changes that can occur in milliseconds
and could last for several hours. These sensors must be
able to respond to the large fold changes in the concentration
of hormones, second messengers, ions and metabolites that can
occur in the apoplast and the symplast. The endogenous and
man-made sensors also need to be capable of responding to
and reporting spatially delimited signaling processes that might
be restricted to specific organs, tissues, organelles or a subregion
of the cytosol. Spatially delimited sensing can be achieved by
cell type expression of endogenous and man-made sensors and
subcellular targeting of proteins. Endogenous sensors are often
restricted to specific regions of the cytosol by tethering to
membranes or other signaling components. Man-made sensors
are often based on fluorescent proteins to maintain the spatial
fidelity of the reported output of the signal.
There are strong parallels in the study of the endogenous
sensors honed by evolution and those made by man as tools for
the experimentalist because the nature of the signal transduced
by the plant, or that detected by the experimentalist, will
depend on both the pattern of the signal and the properties
of the sensor. This is exemplified by a simple thought experiment
in which a cellular gradient of a signal (e.g. second messenger
or metabolite; Fig. 1A) is detected by a sensor (e.g. a
protein receptor or a fluorescent indicator of biological activity;
Fig. 1B). The sensor provides an output dependent on the
sensor’s binding affinity for the signal (Fig. 1). The same is
true for the measurement of temporal dynamics of changes
in signals (Fig. 2A). The full dynamic pattern and temporal
extent of the signal might not be accurately reflected by the
reporter, depending on the sensor properties (Fig. 2B). Thus,
the output from a signaling pathway or experimental analysis
will depend on both the dynamics of the signal and the properties
of the sensor. This presents challenges for the experimentalist,
because one might not be certain of the true
concentration and dynamic range of a signal. Experimentalists
will have a better chance of correctly interpreting the temporal
and spatial dynamics of the signal if they have access to a suite
of sensors with a variety of properties. We are pleased that this
issue contains reports of several new in vivo man-made sensor
technologies.
(c) The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Japanese Society of Plant Physiologists.