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Advances in Proteomics Research in Environmental Stress Response in Plants
13.3.1 NUCLEUS
The nucleus is the most critical organelle for controlling protein expression,
which is crucial for regulating plant response to abiotic stress. The nuclear
protein collaborates along with nucleotide polymers to serve important roles
in the nucleus. Furthermore, inside the nucleus, there is a complex network
of processes that respond to stress. The discovery of novel nuclear proteins
aids our understanding of protein function in providing physiological stress
tolerance. There is currently limited information on the proteomic analysis
of stress-responsive nuclear protein expression profiles in plants.
The nuclear proteome analysis of model plant Arabidopsis response was
analyzed under cold stress using 2-DE and MALDI-TOF/MS, respectively.
So far, 184 protein spots have been discovered, with 158 of them being
involved in a wide range of biological functions. In this, 54 were up-or
down-regulated by more than a factor of two. ABA-dependent and ABA-
independent transcription factors such as bZIP (basic-region leucine-zipper),
bHLH (basic helix-loop-helix), MYB, NAC, and others were also revealed
to have known stress response-related motifs or activity (Bae et al., 2003). In
addition, expression of the 60S ribosomal protein, small nuclear ribonucleo
protein A’ (U2 snRNP-A’), and Hsc70-1 (heat-shock protein chaperon 70-1)
was stimulated.
The nuclear proteome of drought-treated chickpea to obtain a good under
standing of the molecular mechanisms that represent dehydration-responsive
adaptation (Pandey et al., 2008). They identified a total of 205 differentially
regulated protein spots, among them 147 differentially expressed proteins
involved in gene expression, signal transmission, chaperones, chromatin
remodeling, ROS scavenging enzymes, and nucleocytoplasmic transport and
Ran-binding protein (RanBP).
To understand a better knowledge of the molecular pathways that repre
sent dehydration-responsive adaptation, a comparable drought-responsive
nuclear proteome investigation was carried out in rice (Choudhary et al.,
2009). They discovered 109 proteins that are believed to be involved in tran
scriptional control, chromatin remodeling, signaling, and gene regulation,
cell defense and rescue, and protein degradation, among other functions.
They also revealed a differential display of nuclear proteome of 150 protein
spots whose intensities varied substantially over the dehydration period.
The presence of 27 phosphoproteins controlled by ABA and phosphory
lated in response to flooding was discovered in research of nuclear phos
phoproteins in soybean root tip during flooding, including zinc-finger/BTB