Abstract

BackgroundMaize is one of the important cereal food crops in the world. High temperature stress causes adverse influence on plant growth. When plants are exposed to high temperatures, they produce heat shock proteins (HSPs), which may impart a generalized role in tolerance to heat stress. Proteome analysis was performed in plant to assess the changes in protein types and their expression levels under abiotic stress. The purpose of the study is to explore which proteins are involved in the response of the maize plant to heat shock treatment.ResultsWe investigated the responses of abundant proteins of maize leaves, in an Egyptian inbred line of maize “K1”, upon heat stress through two-dimensional electrophoresis (2-DE) on samples of maize leaf proteome. 2-DE technique was used to recognize heat-responsive protein spots using Coomassie Brilliant Blue (CBB) and silver staining. In 2-D analysis of proteins from plants treated at 45 °C for 2 h, the results manifested 59 protein spots (4.3%) which were reproducibly detected as new spots where did not present in the control. In 2D for treated plants for 4 h, 104 protein spots (7.7%) were expressed only under heat stress. Quantification of spot intensities derived from heat treatment showed that twenty protein spots revealed clear differences between the control and the two heat treatments. Nine spots appeared with more intensity after heat treatments than the control, while four spots appeared only after heat treatments. Five spots were clearly induced after heat treatment either at 2 h or 4 h and were chosen for more analysis by LC-MSMS. They were identified as ATPase beta subunit, HSP26, HSP16.9, and unknown HSP/Chaperonin.ConclusionThe results revealed that the expressive level of the four heat shock proteins that were detected in this study plays important roles to avoid heat stress in maize plants.

Highlights

  • Maize is one of the important cereal food crops in the world

  • The spots of proteins that were produced by Two-dimension electrophoresis (2-DE) were detected after Coomassie Brilliant Blue (CBB)-R250 and silver staining, in which the percentage of merge between the three gel replicates of each treatment beside the untreated plants was validated

  • Five spots were clearly induced after heat treatment either at 2 h or 4 h and were chosen for more analysis (1402, 1395, 1090, 1080 and 982) which in 1090 and 1080 spots, the proteins are absent in the control (Fig. 5)

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Summary

Introduction

Maize is one of the important cereal food crops in the world. High temperature stress causes adverse influence on plant growth. When plants are exposed to high temperatures, they produce heat shock proteins (HSPs), which may impart a generalized role in tolerance to heat stress. Proteome analysis was performed in plant to assess the changes in protein types and their expression levels under abiotic stress. The most critical function of plant cell is to respond against stress induced for self-defense. This defense is brought about by modification in the pattern of gene expression: qualitative and quantitative changes in proteins leading to modulation of certain metabolic and defensive pathways. Recent proteome analysis performed in plant has provided new dimensions to evaluate the changes in protein types and their expression levels under abiotic stress.

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