Disordered cold regulated15 proteins protect chloroplast membranes during freezing through binding and folding, but do not stabilize chloroplast enzymes in vivo.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Freezing can severely damage plants, limiting geographical distribution of natural populations and leading to major agronomical losses. Plants native to cold climates acquire increased freezing tolerance during exposure to low nonfreezing temperatures in a process termed cold acclimation. This involves many adaptative responses, including global changes in metabolite content and gene expression, and the accumulation of cold-regulated (COR) proteins, whose functions are largely unknown. Here we report that the chloroplast proteins COR15A and COR15B are necessary for full cold acclimation in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). They protect cell membranes, as indicated by electrolyte leakage and chlorophyll fluorescence measurements. Recombinant COR15 proteins stabilize lactate dehydrogenase during freezing in vitro. However, a transgenic approach shows that they have no influence on the stability of selected plastidic enzymes in vivo, although cold acclimation results in increased enzyme stability. This indicates that enzymes are stabilized by other mechanisms. Recombinant COR15 proteins are disordered in water, but fold into amphipathic α-helices at high osmolyte concentrations in the presence of membranes, a condition mimicking molecular crowding induced by dehydration during freezing. X-ray scattering experiments indicate protein-membrane interactions specifically under such crowding conditions. The COR15-membrane interactions lead to liposome stabilization during freezing. Collectively, our data demonstrate the requirement for COR15 accumulation for full cold acclimation of Arabidopsis. The function of these intrinsically disordered proteins is the stabilization of chloroplast membranes during freezing through a folding and binding mechanism, but not the stabilization of chloroplastic enzymes. This indicates a high functional specificity of these disordered plant proteins.
منابع مشابه
Unraveling the Structure-function Relationship of Two Closely Related Intrinsically Disordered Arabidopsis Thaliana Lea Proteins, Cor15a and Cor15b
Late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins were first described about 30 years ago as accumulating in plant seeds during late stages of embryogenesis. Later they were also found in vegetative plant tissues, especially after exposure to abiotic stresses and in several desiccation tolerant bacteria and invertebrates. Most LEA proteins are IDPs under physiological conditions and many fold upon dry...
متن کاملA mechanism for stabilization of membranes at low temperatures by an antifreeze protein.
Polar fish, cold hardy plants, and overwintering insects produce antifreeze proteins (AFPs), which lower the freezing point of solutions noncolligatively and inhibit ice crystal growth. Fish AFPs have been shown to stabilize membranes and cells in vitro during hypothermic storage, probably by interacting with the plasma membrane, but the mechanism of this stabilization has not been clear. We sh...
متن کاملDehydrins (LTI29, LTI30, and COR47) from Arabidopsis thaliana expressed in Escherichia coli protect thylakoid membranes during freezing
As the name dehydrins implies, these proteins are typically expressed in response to dehydration, which can be caused by drought, osmotic stress, or freezing temperatures.1 In general, dehydrins occur in plants as multi-gene families. Four arabidopsis dehydrins (LTI29, ERD14, COR47 and RAB18) were tested for protection of thylakoid membranes during freeze–thaw cycles in vitro.2,3 The first repo...
متن کاملArabidopsis Cor15am is a chloroplast stromal protein that has cryoprotective activity and forms oligomers.
Many plants acquire increased freezing tolerance when they are exposed to nonfreezing temperatures of a certain duration. This process is known as cold acclimation and allows plants to protect themselves from freezing injury. A wide variety of polypeptides are induced during cold acclimation, among which is one encoded by COR15A in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). Previous studies showed tha...
متن کاملMembrane rupture is the common cause of damage to chloroplast membranes in leaves injured by freezing or excessive wilting.
The effects of freezing and desiccation of spinach leaves (Spinacia oleracea L. cv Yates) on the thylakoid membranes were assessed using antibodies specific for thylakoid membrane proteins. The peripheral part of the chloroplast coupling factor ATPase (CF1) was used as a molecular marker for chemical membrane damage by chaotropic solutes. Plastocyanin, a soluble protein localized inside the clo...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Plant physiology
دوره 166 1 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2014