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Dale Sanders

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences

ORCID: 0000-0002-1452-9808

Publishes on Plant Stress Responses and Tolerance, Plant and Biological Electrophysiology Studies, Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms. 217 papers and 20.9k citations.

217Publications
20.9kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

The Language of Calcium Signaling
Antony N. Dodd, Jörg Kudla, Dale Sanders|Annual Review of Plant Biology|2010
Cited by 1.3k

Ca(2+) signals are a core regulator of plant cell physiology and cellular responses to the environment. The channels, pumps, and carriers that underlie Ca(2+) homeostasis provide the mechanistic basis for generation of Ca(2+) signals by regulating movement of Ca(2+) ions between subcellular compartments and between the cell and its extracellular environment. The information encoded within the Ca(2+) transients is decoded and transmitted by a toolkit of Ca(2+)-binding proteins that regulate transcription via Ca(2+)-responsive promoter elements and that regulate protein phosphorylation. Ca(2+)-signaling networks have architectural structures comparable to scale-free networks and bow tie networks in computing, and these similarities help explain such properties of Ca(2+)-signaling networks as robustness, evolvability, and the ability to process multiple signals simultaneously.

Phylogenetic Relationships within Cation Transporter Families of Arabidopsis
Cited by 1.3kOpen Access

Uptake and translocation of cationic nutrients play essential roles in physiological processes including plant growth, nutrition, signal transduction, and development. Approximately 5% of the Arabidopsis genome appears to encode membrane transport proteins. These proteins are classified in 46 unique families containing approximately 880 members. In addition, several hundred putative transporters have not yet been assigned to families. In this paper, we have analyzed the phylogenetic relationships of over 150 cation transport proteins. This analysis has focused on cation transporter gene families for which initial characterizations have been achieved for individual members, including potassium transporters and channels, sodium transporters, calcium antiporters, cyclic nucleotide-gated channels, cation diffusion facilitator proteins, natural resistance-associated macrophage proteins (NRAMP), and Zn-regulated transporter Fe-regulated transporter-like proteins. Phylogenetic trees of each family define the evolutionary relationships of the members to each other. These families contain numerous members, indicating diverse functions in vivo. Closely related isoforms and separate subfamilies exist within many of these gene families, indicating possible redundancies and specialized functions. To facilitate their further study, the PlantsT database (http://plantst.sdsc.edu) has been created that includes alignments of the analyzed cation transporters and their chromosomal locations.

Calcium at the Crossroads of Signaling
Dale Sanders, Jérôme Pelloux, Colin Brownlee et al.|The Plant Cell|2002
Cited by 1.2kOpen Access

### Calcium Signals: A Central Paradigm in Stimulus–Response Coupling Cells must respond to an array of environmental and developmental cues. The signaling networks that have evolved to generate appropriate cellular responses are varied and are normally composed of elements that include a

Communicating with Calcium
Cited by 950Open Access

### Calcium as a Ubiquitous Signal in Plants All living cells use a network of signal transduction pathways to conduct developmental programs, obtain nutrients, control their metabolism, and cope with their environment. A major challenge for cell biologists is to understand the “language” of