In the shoots of photoperiod-sensitive deciduous trees, including poplar, short-day and non-freezing lowtemperature conditions induce bud dormancy and its break, respectively, and these conditions also induce shoot cold acclimation. In a previous study, levels of organic and inorganic components, including proteins, increased in the xylem sap of Populus nigra in winter, suggesting seasonal changes in root functions. Here, analysis of a major xylem sap protein (XSP24) of P. nigra in winter by mass spectrometry together with the whole genome sequence of P. trichocarpa and transcript abundance in roots under short-day conditions identified PtXSP24 to be a germin-like protein of the cupin superfamily, which was reported to be associated with various stresses and to have oxalate oxidase and/or superoxide dismutase activities in the cell wall. Expression of XSP24, which corresponds to PtXSP24 in P. maximowiczii, a potentially useful Japanese native poplar in the same phylogenetic clade as P. trichocarpa, was enhanced under short-day and non-freezing lowtemperature conditions, as well as by application of abscisic acid. These results suggest that XSP24 is involved in tolerance to environmental stresses in autumn and early winter.
CITATION STYLE
Aohara, T., Mizuno, H., Kiyomichi, D., Abe, Y., Matsuki, K., Sagawa, K., … Satoh, S. (2016). Identification of a xylem sap germin-like protein and its expression under short-day and non-freezing lowtemperature conditions in poplar root. Plant Biotechnology, 33(2), 123–127. https://doi.org/10.5511/plantbiotechnology.16.0411a
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