Nitration of plant apoplastic proteins from cell suspension cultures
Authors:
- Agnieszka Szuba,
- Anna Kasprowicz-Maluśki,
- Przemysław Wojtaszek
Abstract
Nitric oxide causes numerous protein modifications including nitration of tyrosine residues. This modification, though one of the greatest biological importance, is poorly recognized in plants and is usually associated with stress conditions. In this study we analyzed nitrotyrosines from suspension cultures of Arabidopsis thaliana and Nicotiana tabacum, treated with NO modulators and exposed to osmotic stress, as well as of BY2 cells long-term adapted to osmotic stress conditions.Using confocal microscopy, we showed that the cell wall area is one of the compartments most enriched in nitrotyrosines within a plant cell. Subsequently, we analyzed nitration of ionically-bound cell-wall proteins and identified selected proteins with MALDI-TOF spectrometry.Proteomic analysis indicated that there was no significant increase in the amount of nitrated proteins under the influence of NO modulators, among them 3-morpholinosydnonimine (SIN-1), considered a donor of nitrating agent, peroxynitrite. Moreover, osmotic stress conditions did not increase the level of nitration in cell wall proteins isolated from suspension cells, and in cultures long-term adapted to stress conditions; that level was even reduced in comparison with control samples. Among identified nitrotyrosine-containing proteins dominated the ones associated with carbon circulation as well as the numerous proteins responding to stress conditions, mainly peroxidases. Biological significance: High concentrations of nitric oxide found in the cell wall and the ability to produce large amounts of ROS make the apoplast a site highly enriched in nitrotyrosines, as presented in this paper. Analysis of ionically bound fraction of the cell wall proteins indicating generally unchanged amounts of nitrotyrosines under influence of NO modulators and osmotic stress, is noticeably different from literature data concerning, however, the total plant proteins analysis. This observation is supplemented by further nitroproteome analysis, for cells long-term adapted to stressful conditions, and results showing that such conditions did not always cause an increase in nitrotyrosine content. These findings may be interpreted as characteristic features of apoplastic protein nitration.
- Record ID
- UAM854a3c0861cd467d858d3db20f82087e
- Author
- Journal series
- Journal of Proteomics, ISSN 1874-3919
- Issue year
- 2015
- Vol
- 120
- Pages
- 158-168
- ASJC Classification
- ;
- DOI
- DOI:10.1016/j.jprot.2015.03.002 Opening in a new tab
- Language
- (en) English
- Score (nominal)
- 35
- Score source
- journalList
- Score
- Publication indicators
- = 12; = 13; : 2015 = 1.133; : 2015 (2 years) = 3.867 - 2015 (5 years) =3.986
- Uniform Resource Identifier
- https://researchportal.amu.edu.pl/info/article/UAM854a3c0861cd467d858d3db20f82087e/
- URN
urn:amu-prod:UAM854a3c0861cd467d858d3db20f82087e
* presented citation count is obtained through Internet information analysis and it is close to the number calculated by the Publish or PerishOpening in a new tab system.