Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry
Online ISSN : 1347-6947
Print ISSN : 0916-8451
An Early Stage of Cold Acclimation with Four Phases of Protein Synthesis in Crowns of Winter Wheat
Yusuke MATSUDATohru OKUDAAkira YAMANAKAShonosuke SAGISAKA
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

1992 Volume 56 Issue 11 Pages 1715-1720

Details
Abstract

During an early stage of cold acclimation, prominent changes in protein-synthetic activities were found to occur in the crown, which is the part where the stem joins the root of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Horoshirikomugi). This stage was complete within a week of cold treatment, and from the protein-synthetic activities, this stage of cold acclimation could be divided into four phases. First, when the plant seedlings were placed at 0°C, there was a lag period of 1 d and no newly inducible proteins were formed during this time. During the second phase (1 to 2 d), as the first response to cold, 16 new proteins were synthesized and the active synthesis of 6 preexisting proteins was reinitiated, while syntheses of at least 5 preexisting proteins were depressed. During the third phase (2 to 5 d), the levels of most of the cold-inducible proteins reached a maximum, but synthesis of at least 6 preexisting proteins started to decrease. During the fourth phase (after 5 d), the synthetic activities of the 6 proteins returned to the original levels and synthesis of another set of 3 new proteins started. During this phase, the synthesis of both protein fractions, the cold-inducible and the preexisting proteins, reached a steady state. After this period, no major changes in the protein profile could be detected. During the third phase, the most active synthesis of the cold-inducible proteins, in particular, proteins designated C10 (Mr 53 k), C12a (Mr 46 k), and C12b (Mr 46 k), occurred, concurrent with the abrupt and transient decrease in the synthetic activities of a set of 6 preexisting proteins. These results suggest that, in addition to the induction of a set of new proteins, the preferential or selective synthesis of proteins required for accommodation to the cold environment takes place at an early stage of acclimation.

Content from these authors

This article cannot obtain the latest cited-by information.

© Japan Society for Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Agrochemistry
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top