Intracellular Localization and Gene Expression Analysis Provides New Insights on LEA Proteins’ Diversity in Anhydrobiotic Cell Line

Author:

Kondratyeva Sabina A.,Voronina Taisiya A.,Nesmelov Alexander A.,Miyata Yugo,Tokumoto Shoko,Cornette RichardORCID,Vorontsova Maria V.ORCID,Kikawada TakahiroORCID,Gusev Oleg A.ORCID,Shagimardanova Elena I.ORCID

Abstract

Anhydrobiosis, an adaptive ability to withstand complete desiccation, in the nonbiting midge Polypedilum vanderplanki, is associated with the emergence of new multimember gene families, including a group of 27 genes of late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins (PvLea). To obtain new insights into the possible functional specialization of these genes, we investigated the expression and localization of PvLea genes in a P. vanderplanki-derived cell line (Pv11), capable of anhydrobiosis. We confirmed that all but two PvLea genes identified in the genome of P. vanderplanki are expressed in Pv11 cells. Moreover, PvLea genes are induced in Pv11 cells in response to anhydrobiosis-inducing trehalose treatment in a manner highly similar to the larvae of P. vanderplanki during the real induction of anhydrobiosis. Then, we expanded our previous data on PvLEA proteins localization in mammalian cells that were obtained using C-terminal fusions of PvLEA proteins and green fluorescent protein (GFP). We investigated PvLEA localization using N- and C-terminal fusions with GFP in Pv11 cells and the Sf9 insect cell line. We observed an inconsistency of PvLEA localization between different fusion types and different cell cultures, that needs to be taken into account when using PvLEA in the engineering of anhydrobiotic cell lines.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries

Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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