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First published online April 30, 2004; 10.1104/pp.103.038158 Plant Physiology 135:364-376 (2004) © 2004 American Society of Plant Biologists Calcium Interacts with Antifreeze Proteins and Chitinase from Cold-Acclimated Winter Rye1Departments of Biology (S.K., M.G., C.M., L.A.B.) and Chemical Engineering (M.S., C.M.), University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3G1, Canada; and Department of Food Science, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1, Canada (A.G.M.)
During cold acclimation, winter rye (Secale cereale) plants accumulate pathogenesis-related proteins that are also antifreeze proteins (AFPs) because they adsorb onto ice and inhibit its growth. Although they promote winter survival in planta, these dual-function AFPs proteins lose activity when stored at subzero temperatures in vitro, so we examined their stability in solutions containing CaCl2, MgCl2, or NaCl. Antifreeze activity was unaffected by salts before freezing, but decreased after freezing and thawing in CaCl2 and was recovered by adding a chelator. Ca2+ enhanced chitinase activity 3- to 5-fold in unfrozen samples, although hydrolytic activity also decreased after freezing and thawing in CaCl2. Native PAGE, circular dichroism, and Trp fluorescence experiments showed that the AFPs partially unfold after freezing and thawing, but they fold more compactly or aggregate in CaCl2. Ruthenium red, which binds to Ca2+-binding sites, readily stained AFPs in the absence of Ca2+, but less stain was visible after freezing and thawing AFPs in CaCl2. We conclude that the structure of AFPs changes during freezing and thawing, creating new Ca2+-binding sites. Once Ca2+ binds to those sites, antifreeze activity, chitinase activity and ruthenium red binding are all inhibited. Because free Ca2+ concentrations are typically low in the apoplast, antifreeze activity is probably stable to freezing and thawing in planta. Ca2+ may regulate chitinase activity if concentrations are increased locally by release from pectin or interaction with Ca2+-binding proteins. Furthermore, antifreeze activity can be easily maintained in vitro by including a chelator during frozen storage.
To become freezing-tolerant, overwintering cereals must first undergo a complex adjustment of plant morphology and metabolism known as cold acclimation. As winter rye (Secale cereale) plants acclimate to cold temperatures, they secrete pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins, including endochitinases, -1,3-glucanases, and thaumatin-like proteins into intercellular spaces and the xylem (Hon et al., 1995
The dual-function PR proteins/AFPs must be stable to freezing and thawing if they are to provide resistance to pathogens and modify the growth of ice in planta over the course of a typical winter. However, in the course of our experiments, we observed a significant decrease in antifreeze activity when AFPs extracted from winter rye leaves were frozen to 20°C and thawed repeatedly. AFPs isolated from the taproots of carrots also lost activity when they were stored at 80°C or at 196°C for 10 weeks (Hong Wang et al., 2002
We usually extract AFPs from the apoplast of cold-acclimated (CA) winter rye leaves by intercellular washing (Hon et al., 1994
Antifreeze Activity Decreases When Ca2+ Is Present During Freezing and Thawing To determine the effect of cations on antifreeze activity, apoplastic proteins extracted from CA winter rye leaves were dialyzed in CaCl2 solutions ranging from 10 to 200 mM at pH 5.5, then assayed for their ability to alter the shape of an ice crystal grown in solution. For a negative control treatment, the proteins were dialyzed in 5 mM EDTA to achieve 0 mM Ca2+. When the solutions were maintained at 4°C, there was no effect (P > 0.05) of CaCl2 on antifreeze activity over the entire concentration range of 0 to 200 mM CaCl2 (Fig. 1A). Freezing and thawing AFPs in solutions of 0 or 10 mM CaCl2 also had no effect on antifreeze activity (Fig. 1A). However, there was a statistically significant interaction (P < 0.01) between cation concentration and freeze-thaw cycles. Antifreeze activity decreased by 36% when the apoplastic proteins were subjected to three freeze-thaw cycles in the presence of 20 mM or more CaCl2 (Fig. 1A). The total protein concentrations in our experiments were approximately 5 µM, so the concentrations of cation concentrations used were all in excess of the protein concentrations.
To determine whether the cation effect was specific for Ca2+, apoplastic proteins were also dialyzed in solutions containing 20 or 200 mM MgCl2 or NaCl in place of CaCl2 (Fig. 1B). There were no significant effects (P > 0.05) of freezing and thawing winter rye AFPs in the presence of 20 or 200 mM NaCl or 200 mM MgCl2 upon antifreeze activity, but there was a 13% decrease (P < 0.05) in antifreeze activity when apoplastic proteins were frozen and thawed in 20 mM MgCl2 (Fig. 1B). By using CaCl2, MgCl2, and NaCl in the freeze-thaw experiments, we were able to discount the Cl anion and the cation Na+ as factors affecting antifreeze activity. Our results show that freezing and thawing in the presence of Ca2+ caused a much larger decrease in antifreeze activity compared with the effect of Mg2+. The loss of antifreeze activity was not caused by protein denaturation as the salt concentration increased during freezing (salting out) because freezing AFPs in solutions containing 200 mM MgCl2 or NaCl did not inhibit antifreeze activity (Fig. 1B). Moreover, the effect of Ca2+ on antifreeze activity was reversible in the presence of chelators (Fig. 1C). Antifreeze activity was restored to the level of the unfrozen control samples by dialyzing the 20 mM-CaCl2 samples in 5 mM EGTA after freezing and thawing (Fig. 1C). Because antifreeze activity was affected by Ca2+ or Mg2+ only in samples that had been frozen and thawed, we predicted that the addition of chelators before freezing would prevent the loss of antifreeze activity observed after freezing. In fact, antifreeze activity was not affected (P > 0.05) by repeated freezing and thawing in the presence of 5 mM EDTA, 5 mM sodium succinate, or 5 mM EGTA, all at pH 5.5 (Fig. 1D).
The effects of cations and freeze-thaw cycles on apoplastic proteins were also monitored by assaying chitinase activity. There are two chitinases present in apoplastic extracts obtained from CA winter rye leaves (Hon et al., 1995
Each of the three cations had a different effect on chitinase specific activity after three freeze-thaw cycles (Fig. 2B). Adding 10 mM CaCl2 resulted in a loss of 36% of the chitinase specific activity following three freeze-thaw cycles (P < 0.01), and the effect was not reversed by adding 5 mM EDTA (Fig. 2C). Surprisingly, the specific activity of the chitinases was enhanced by 12% (P < 0.01) following three freeze-thaw cycles in the presence of 1 or 10 mM MgCl2 (Fig. 2B). There was no effect of freeze-thaw cycles on chitinase specific activity in the presence of 1 or 10 mM NaCl (P > 0.05). When apoplastic proteins were dialyzed in 5 mM Na-succinate or EGTA at pH 5.5, the chitinase specific activity was low (Fig. 2D) and was unaffected by three freeze-thaw cycles (P > 0.05). However, chitinase specific activity decreased by 16% (P < 0.05) when apoplastic proteins were dialyzed into 5 mM EDTA at pH 5.5 and exposed to three freeze-thaw cycles (P < 0.05).
To ascertain that the effects of cations on chitinase specific activity were not confounded by the presence of two chitinases in the apoplastic extracts, we purified the 35-kD, class I chitinase in its native state by affinity chromatography on a colloidal chitin column. As shown by SDS-PAGE, fractions eluted from the column in 20 mM acetic acid, pH 3, contained a single native protein (NP3) with major polypeptides at 35- and 12-kD (Fig. 3, A and B). This oligomer has previously been shown by immunoblotting to contain a 35-kD chitinase, a 35-kD glucanase, and a 12-kD thaumatin-like protein (Yu and Griffith, 1999
Calcium Induces Aggregation of Native Apoplastic Proteins
To determine the effect of cations on the structure of apoplastic proteins, apoplastic extracts were dialyzed into solutions of CaCl2, MgCl2, and NaCl, and separated by native PAGE. As shown in Figure 4A, apoplastic extracts dialyzed against low concentrations (010 mM) of CaCl2 exhibited nine native proteins (described previously by Yu and Griffith, 1999
When apoplastic proteins were frozen and thawed three times in the presence of 1 to 200 mM CaCl2 and then separated by native PAGE, the same native proteins were observed, but it was not possible to resolve the bands as clearly as in unfrozen samples (Fig. 4C). Because proteins in native PAGE are separated by charge as well as by size, the lack of resolution after freezing and thawing may be caused by changes in protein charge after binding Ca2+ or by changing the composition or aggregation of the oligomers.
In order to confirm that Ca2+ interacts directly with apoplastic proteins, we examined the staining of apoplastic proteins with ruthenium red, which is known to bind at the same sites that bind Ca2+ (Achenbach and Ewart, 2002
Ruthenium red was completely displaced from apoplastic proteins isolated from CA winter rye leaves by incubating the ruthenium red-stained membranes in a solution containing 100 mM CaCl2 or 100 mM MgCl2 (Fig. 5A). This effect was due to binding of divalent cations because ruthenium red was not displaced when the CA apoplastic proteins were incubated in 100 mM NaCl or KCl (Fig. 5A). When the proteins were degraded by incubation with Pronase E, antifreeze activity disappeared and the binding of ruthenium red decreased (Fig. 5B), thus demonstrating that cation binding and antifreeze activity were both associated with proteinaceous components of the apoplastic extract. Ruthenium red readily bound to apoplastic proteins that were dialyzed in Tris-EDTA buffer and were either held unfrozen or subjected to freeze-thaw cycles (Fig. 5C). Ruthenium red could still stain the proteins when MgCl2 or NaCl were present during the freeze-thaw cycles. However, freezing and thawing the proteins in the presence of CaCl2 reduced their subsequent ability to bind ruthenium red, thus indicating that Ca2+ binding sites were inaccessible to the dye (Fig. 5C).
CD was used in the near UV (240320 nm) to examine the effects of cations and freeze-thaw cycles on the tertiary structure of AFPs (Strickland, 1974 Apoplastic proteins dialyzed into 5 mM EDTA to minimize cation concentrations and stored at 4°C exhibited the most negative near-UV spectrum (0EDTA, Fig. 6A). Freezing and thawing the apoplastic proteins three times in the absence of cations resulted in a dramatic increase in the mean residue ellipticity (3EDTA, Fig. 6A). When the apoplastic proteins were dialyzed into 20 mM CaCl2 or MgCl2, they also exhibited an increase in mean residue ellipticity that was similar to the effect of freeze-thaw cycles (0CaCl2, 0MgCl2; Fig. 6A). We calculated difference spectra in the near UV by subtracting the 0EDTA treatment from all the other treatments to examine the effects of three freeze-thaw cycles on the interaction of cations with apoplastic proteins (Fig. 6B). Interestingly, freezing and thawing the proteins in 20 mM MgCl2 (3MgCl2, Fig. 6B) resulted in a more pronounced positive shift of the near-UV CD spectrum than freezing and thawing apoplastic proteins dialyzed into CaCl2 (3CaCl2, Fig. 6B).
To better understand the nature of the structural changes in apoplastic proteins caused by freeze-thaw cycles and cations, we also used Trp fluorescence to examine the degree of solvent exposure of the chromophore and polarization of the Trp ring (Reshetnyak et al., 2001
Effects of Cations and Freeze-Thaw Cycles on Secondary Structure of Apoplastic Proteins
The effects of cations and freeze-thaw cycles on the secondary structure of AFPs were examined by CD in the far-UV range (Fig. 6C; Campbell and Dwek, 1984
The addition of CaCl2 to the apoplastic proteins resulted in the smallest observable change in protein secondary structure compared with the 0EDTA control (0CaCl2, Fig. 6D). The small increase in mean residue ellipticity at 208 and 222 nm coupled with the small decrease in mean residue ellipticity at 193 nm indicated a loss of
Antifreeze activity has been observed in many overwintering organisms, including bacteria, fungi, invertebrates, and vertebrates, as well as plants (DeVries, 1986
Winter rye plants accumulate PR proteins at warm temperatures when the plants are treated with pathogenic fungi, salicylic acid, or abscisic acid (Hiilovaara-Teijo et al., 1999 Both freeze-thaw cycles and cations affected the structure or organization of the apoplastic proteins from CA winter rye leaves. Freeze-thaw cycles alone caused a large positive shift of the near-UV CD spectrum (Fig. 6), the disappearance of the Trp fluorescence peak at 328 nm (Table I), and the loss of secondary structural elements coupled with an increase in random coil (Fig. 6), perhaps by partially unfolding the proteins or rearranging the complexes. However, these structural changes did not affect antifreeze activity (Fig. 1), nor did they inhibit binding of ruthenium red (Fig. 5). Adding Ca2+ did not affect antifreeze activity, but did change the structure of apoplastic proteins extracted from CA winter rye leaves, as shown by decreased migration in native PAGE (Fig. 4), a large positive shift in near-UV CD (Fig. 6), the blue shift of the Trp fluorescence peak to 336.5 nm (Table I), and a small change in secondary structure (Fig. 6). Only the combination of freezing and thawing apoplastic proteins in the presence of Ca2+ decreased antifreeze activity (Fig. 1), chitinase activity (Fig. 2), and ruthenium red staining (Fig. 5). One interpretation of these results is that apoplastic proteins undergo a structural change during freezing that creates new Ca2+-binding sites. Once Ca2+ binds to those sites, the structure or organization of the oligomers becomes more compact, and antifreeze and chitinase activities are both inhibited.
AFPs from other organisms are known to undergo structural changes at cold temperatures that affect their ice-binding domains. For example, upon cooling, helical and
The winter rye AFPs and type II AFPs from North Atlantic fish all exhibit homology to proteins that bind carbohydrates (Ewart et al., 1999
Cations may also inhibit AFPs from other organisms. Li and coworkers (1998a)
The specific activity of chitinases isolated from CA winter rye leaves was enhanced 3- to 5-fold in the presence of more than 10 mM CaCl2 or MgCl2 (Figs. 2A and 3C). Only a few studies have reported the effect of cations on chitinase activity. In one case, a chitinase isolated from the marine bacterium Alteromonas sp. was activated 1.6-fold by 1 mM Mg2+ and 1.3-fold by 1 mM Na+, K+, or Ca2+ (Tsujibo et al., 1992
Although Ca2+ enhances chitinase activity before freezing, it inhibits chitinase activity after freezing and thawing (Figs. 2 and 3). Chitinase activity could not be restored by chelators after freezing and thawing in the presence of Ca2+ (Fig. 2). These results indicate that the Ca2+ binding site(s) involved in activating the chitinases is different from the Ca2+ binding site(s) that inhibit both antifreeze and chitinase activities. Our observation that Mg2+ enhances chitinase activity (Fig. 2), but has little effect on antifreeze activity before or after freeze-thaw cycles (Fig. 1), shows that Mg2+ can bind to the regulatory site normally occupied by Ca2+, but not to the Ca2+-binding sites exposed by freezing and thawing. We were unable to localize the Ca2+-binding sites because searches using the tools available at the InterProScan and ExPASy sites (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/scan.html, June 2003; and http://ca.expasy.org/tools/scanprosite/, June 2003; respectively) did not find any known Ca2+-binding domains in the amino acid sequences of cold-induced winter rye class I and class II chitinases with antifreeze activity (Yeh et al., 2000
The free Ca2+ concentration in the apoplast usually ranges from 0.1 to 1 mM (Bush, 1995
The effects of freeze-thaw cycles and Ca2+ on AFPs are summarized in Figure 7. AFPs/PR proteins accumulate as a population of oligomeric proteins in the apoplast of winter rye leaves during cold acclimation and exhibit ice-binding activity and antifungal activities such as chitin hydrolysis. When frozen and thawed in the absence of cations, the AFPs/PR proteins maintain both antifreeze and chitinase activities (Figs. 1 and 2) even though they undergo structural changes (Table I; Fig. 6). In the presence of Ca2+, the native proteins adopt a more compact structure that enhances chitinase activity but does not affect antifreeze activity (Figs. 1, 2, and 3). However, there is an interaction between freeze-thaw treatments and Ca2+. When the AFPs/PR proteins are repeatedly frozen and thawed in the presence of Ca2+, they bind Ca2+ at newly exposed sites (Fig. 5), which changes their structure (Table I; Fig. 6) and inhibits antifreeze and chitinase activities (Figs. 1 and 2). Both chitinase and antifreeze activities can be easily maintained during frozen storage in vitro by adding a chelator to minimize the interaction between AFPs and divalent cations during freezing and thawing. The free Ca2+ concentration in the leaf apoplast is low, so AFPs should be stable to freezing and thawing in planta.
Plant Materials Seeds of winter rye (Secale cereale L. cv Musketeer) were sown at a rate of 5 g seed per 15-cm pot of ProMix BX (Premier Horticulture, Riviere de Loup, Quebec, Canada). NA plants were grown at 20°C/16°C (day/night) with a 16-h daylength and a photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) of 300 µmol m2 s1 for 3 weeks. For cold acclimation, plants were transferred after 1 week to 5°C/2°C (day/night) with an 8-h daylength and a PPFD of 300 µmol m2 s1 for an additional 7 weeks. Plants were watered as needed and fertilized weekly with 0.5 g L1 of 20-20-20 all-purpose fertilizer (Plant Products, Brampton, Ontario, Canada).
Apoplastic proteins were extracted as described by Hon et al. (1994)
Aliquots of apoplastic extracts containing 150 µg protein were dialyzed for 16 h at 4°C against several changes of 1 L of various concentrations (1, 10, 20, 50, or 200 mM) of CaCl2, and against 1 L of 20 or 200 mM of CaCl2, MgCl2, or NaCl; and against 1 L of 5 mM EDTA, sodium succinate, or EGTA (which are all carboxylic acids), at pH 5.5, using Spectra/Por dialysis membranes with a 12,000 to 14,000 MW cutoff (Spectrum Laboratories, Rancho Dominguez, CA). After dialysis, half of the samples were used as unfrozen controls, and antifreeze and chitinase activities were measured immediately. The remaining samples were subjected to freeze-thaw cycles by placing them in a freezer at 20°C for 2 h, and then thawing them rapidly (5 min) at 20°C. To examine the reversibility of cation effects, samples that were frozen and thawed in 20 or 200 mM of CaCl2 were dialyzed again against several changes of 1 L of 5 mM EGTA or 50 mM EDTA at pH 5.5 for 16 h at 4°C. Samples were assayed for antifreeze and chitinase activities immediately, and then stored at 4°C for analysis by native PAGE. All experiments were carried out using three independent extracts as replicates.
Antifreeze activity was assayed by examining the morphology of ice crystals grown in solution by using a thermoelectric freezing stage of a Clifton nanoliter osmometer (Hartford, NY) mounted on a phase-contrast photomicroscope (Olympus BHT, Tokyo; Hon et al., 1994
Chitinase Activity
Chitinase activity was assayed by using 50 µM 4-methylumbelliferyl
A native apoplastic protein (NP3; Yu and Griffith, 1999
Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE on 12% (w/v) polyacrylamide gels according to the method of Laemmli (1970)
Apoplastic extracts (30 mL) from NA and CA winter rye leaves were lyophilized and resuspended in 2 mL of Tris-EDTA buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 5.3, 20 mM EDTA). Although this step involved initially freezing the samples, we have shown that the effects of freezing in the presence of cations are reversible by adding EDTA (Figs. 1 and 2). Samples were dialyzed using Spectra/Por dialysis membranes with a 12,000 to 14,000 MW cutoff against three changes of 800 mL of Tris-EDTA buffer. Equal amounts (50 or 100 µg) of proteins from NA and CA extracts were spotted onto nitrocellulose membranes (0.45 µm pore size, Bio-Rad, preequilibrated in Tris-EDTA buffer) using a Bio Dot blot-SF apparatus (Bio-Rad). Blots were washed with the same buffer and then stained with 0.1 mg mL1 ruthenium red (Sigma) dissolved in Tris-EDTA buffer, at room temperature for 10 min. Stained blots were washed in Tris-EDTA buffer and photographed while still damp using a digital camera (Coolpix 990, Nikon, Tokyo). Displacement of ruthenium red staining was determined by photographing membranes after washing them with solutions containing 100 mM NaCl, KCl, MgCl2, or CaCl2 dissolved in Tris-EDTA buffer for 10 min. To determine the effect of cations during freeze-thaw cycles, 40 mM NaCl, MgCl2, or CaCl2 were added to apoplastic proteins dissolved in Tris-EDTA buffer, then the samples were frozen and thawed three times as described above along with a control sample to which no salts were added. Ovalbumin was dissolved in Tris-EDTA buffer as a positive control for ruthenium red staining. All the proteins were then spotted onto a nitrocellulose membrane and stained with ruthenium red as described above.
Apoplastic extracts were concentrated to 1 mg protein mL1 by ultrafiltration using Microcon YM-10 spin filters (Millipore Corp., Bedford, MA) that were centrifuged at 1,500g for 2 h at 5°C. Samples of concentrated extract were dialyzed against 1 L of 5 mM EDTA (pH 5.5), 20 mM CaCl2, or 20 mM MgCl2 for 16 h at 4°C and assayed to determine the final protein content. Half of the samples were stored at 4°C as unfrozen controls. The remaining samples were subjected to three freeze-thaw cycles and then maintained at 4°C until analysis. Three near-UV (320240 nm) and far-UV (190250 nm) spectra were acquired and averaged for each of the six treatments at a concentration of 1 mg protein mL1 or diluted to 50 µg protein mL1, respectively, using a spectropolarimeter (model J-600, Jasco, Easton, MD) with a 1-cm pathlength and a 1-nm bandwidth, at a scanning rate of 20 nm min1 at room temperature. The data correspond to the mean residue ellipticities [ Independent samples of each of the treatments used for CD were also assayed for Trp fluorescence using a Shimadzu Spectrofluorophotometer RF-540 (Mandel Scientific, Guelph, Ontario, Canada) with a Shimadzu Data Recorder DR-3. Protein solutions containing 0.1 mg mL1 were excited at 280 nm, and the emission spectra were monitored from 300 to 380 nm. The scans were performed against their salt blanks, and all analyses were performed in triplicate.
Musketeer rye seeds were obtained from Dr. Grant McLeod (Agriculture Canada, Swift Current, Saskatchewan, Canada). We are grateful to Dr. Rickey Yada and Massimo Marcone at the Department of Food Science, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada, and Andre Peters, University of Applied Science Berlin, Germany, for their technical assistance with the CD and Trp fluorescence experiments, and Dr. Xiao-Ming Yu, St. Jacobs, Ontario, for technical advice on native PAGE and colloidal chitin affinity chromatography. We thank Dr. Wayne Snedden, Department of Biology, Queens University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada, for advice in analyzing the properties of calcium-binding proteins. We also thank Mr. and Mrs. Stressmann for their financial support of M. Stressmann in Canada and Osaka Shoin Women's University for sabbatical support for Dr. S. Kitao. Dr. L.A. Bravo was supported by a research fellowship funded by MECESUP UCO 9906. Received December 19, 2003; returned for revision February 9, 2004; accepted February 9, 2004.
1 This work was supported by a grant from the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (to M.G.) and by a grant from the University of Waterloo Interdisciplinary Research Program (to C.M.).
2 These authors contributed equally to the paper.
3 Permanent address: Department of Food Science and Nutrition, Osaka Shoin Women's University, 226, Hishiyanishi 4, Higashi-Osaka, 5778550, Japan.
4 Permanent address: Departamento de Botánica, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Oceanográficas, Universidad de Concepción, Casilla 160C, Concepción, Chile. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.103.038158. * Corresponding author; e-mail griffith{at}uwaterloo.ca; fax 5197460614.
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