Water Deficit Rapidly Stimulates the Activity of a Protein Kinase in the Elongation Zone of the Maize Primary Root

Plant Physiol. 1997 Jan;113(1):219-226. doi: 10.1104/pp.113.1.219.

Abstract

The mechanisms by which plants detect water deficit and transduce that signal into adaptive responses is unknown. In maize (Zea mays L.) seedlings, primary roots adapt to low water potentials such that substantial rates of elongation continue when shoot growth is completely inhibited. In this study, in-gel protein kinase assays were used to determine whether protein kinases in the elongation zone of the primary root undergo activation or inactivation in response to water deficit. Multiple differences were detected in the phosphoprotein content of root tips of water-stressed compared with well-watered seedlings. Protein kinase assays identified water-deficit-activated protein kinases, including a 45-kD, Ca2+-independent serine/threonine protein kinase. Water-deficit activation of this kinase occurred within 30 min after transplanting seedlings to conditions of low water potential and was localized to the elongation zone, was independent of ABA accumulation, and was unaffected by cycloheximide-mediated inhibition of protein translation. These results provide evidence that the 45-kD protein kinase acts at an early step in the response of maize primary roots to water deficit and is possibly involved in regulating the adaptation of root growth to low water potential.