Antifreeze protein produced endogenously in winter rye leaves

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Abstract

After cold acclimation, winter rye (Secale cereale L.) is able to withstand the formation of extracellular ice at freezing temperatures. We now show, for the first time, that cold-acclimated winter rye plants contain endogenously produced antifreeze protein. The protein was extracted from the apoplast of winter rye leaves, where ice forms during freezing. After partial purification, the protein was identified as antifreeze protein because it modified the normal growth pattern of ice crystals and depressed the freezing temperature of water noncolligatively.

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Griffith, M., Ala, P., Yang, D. S. C., Hon, W. C., & Moffatt, B. A. (1992). Antifreeze protein produced endogenously in winter rye leaves. Plant Physiology, 100(2), 593–596. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.100.2.593

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