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The Absence of Heat Shock Protein HSP101 Affects the Proteome of Mature and Germinating Maize Embryos

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posted on 2012-06-01, 00:00 authored by Pedro E. Lázaro-Mixteco, Jorge Nieto-Sotelo, Kirby N. Swatek, Norma L. Houston, Guillermo Mendoza-Hernández, Jay J. Thelen, Tzvetanka D. Dinkova
Maize heat shock protein HSP101 accumulates during embryo maturation and desiccation and persists at high levels during the first 24 h following kernel imbibition in the absence of heat stress. This protein has a known function in disaggregation of high molecular weight complexes and has been proposed to be a translational regulator of specific mRNAs. Here, a global proteomic approach was used to identify changes in the maize proteome due to the absence of HSP101 in embryos from mature-dry or 24 h-imbibed kernels. A total of 26 protein spots from the mature dry embryo exhibited statistically significant expression changes in the L10 inbred <i>hsp101</i> mutant (<i>hsp101-m5::Mu1</i>/<i>hsp101-m5::Mu1</i>) line as compared to the corresponding wild type (<i>Hsp101</i>/<i>Hsp101</i>). Additional six spots reproducibly showed qualitative changes between the mutant and wild-type mature and germinating embryos. Several chaperones, translation-related proteins, actin, and enzymes participating in cytokinin metabolism were identified in these spots by tandem mass-spectrometry (MS). The proteomic changes partially explain the altered root growth and architecture observed in young <i>hsp101</i> mutant seedlings. In addition, specific protein de novo synthesis was altered in the 24 h-imbibed mutant embryos indicating that maize HSP101 functions as both chaperone and translational regulator during germination. Supporting this, HSP101 was found as part of Cap-binding and translation initiation complexes during early kernel imbibition. Overall, these findings expose the relevance of maize HSP101 for protein synthesis and balance mechanisms during germination.

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