Abstract
AbstractCold acclimation is a complex biological process leading to the development of freezing tolerance in plants. In this study, we demonstrated that cold-induced expression of protease inhibitor FmASP in a citrus relative species kumquat (Fortunella margarita(Lour.) Swingle) contributes to its freezing tolerance by regulating protein degradation. First, we found that only cold-acclimated kumquat plants, although with extensive leaf cellular damage during freezing, are able to resume their normal growth upon stress relief. To dissect the impact of cold acclimation on this extraordinary freezing tolerance, we performed protein abundance assay and quantitative proteomics analysis of kumquat leaves subjected to cold acclimation (4 °C), freezing treatment (−10 °C) and post-stress recovery (25 °C). FmASP and a few non-specific proteases were identified as differentially expressed proteins induced by cold acclimation and associated with stable protein abundance throughout the course of freezing treatment. FmASP was further characterized as a robust inhibitor that inhibits the degradation capacity of multiple proteases. In addition, heterogeneous expression ofFmASPin Arabidopsis confirmed its positive function in freezing tolerance. Finally, we proposed a working model of FmASP and illustrated how this extracellular-localized protease inhibitor protects proteins from degradation and consequently maintains essential cellular function for freezing stress recovery. These findings revealed the important role of protease inhibition on freezing response and provide insights on how this role may help develop new strategies to enhance plant freezing tolerance.One-sentence summaryA protease inhibitor ofFortunella margaritaenhances protein stability and freezing tolerance by regulating non-specific protease degradation
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory