Abstract

Proteomic analyses of soybean seedlings responding to flooding were conducted to identify key proteins involved. The seeds were germinated on a spongy matrix for two days, and then subjected to flooding for three days. After flooding, the total number of roots, the length of the main root, the lengths of the lateral and adventitious roots, and the fresh weight of the underground tissues of flooded soybean seedlings were significantly suppressed compared with nontreated plants. To identify the early flooding-responsive proteins, the seedling roots were used for preparing cytosolic and membrane fractions. After two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and silver staining, 208 proteins were detected, and the levels of 44 were different from those of the control. The expression pattern of 10 proteins among the 44 from six different soybean cultivars confirmed that the 10 were flooding-responsive proteins. One of the 10 proteins was dominantly down-regulated under flooding conditions and was identified as cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase 2 (cAPX 2). Northern-hybridization showed that the abundance of cAPX 2 transcript decreased significantly after flooding, as did the enzymatic activity of APX. These results suggest that cAPX 2 is involved in flooding stress responses in young soybean seedlings.

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