Af. Monroy et al., LOW-TEMPERATURE SIGNAL-TRANSDUCTION DURING COLD-ACCLIMATION - PROTEINPHOSPHATASE 2A AS AN EARLY TARGET FOR COLD-INACTIVATION, Plant journal, 13(5), 1998, pp. 653-660
The authors have previously shown that cold acclimation and cold accli
mation-specific (cas) gene expression in alfalfa require cold-triggere
d calcium influx and phosphorylation of specific pre-existing proteins
. In this study, the authors used the expression of cas 15 gene as an
end-point marker to examine the role of protein phosphorylation in low
temperature signal transduction in alfalfa cells. Whereas the protein
kinase inhibitor staurosporine prevented the cold induction of cas15,
the protein phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid induced the cas 15 at
25 degrees C. Upon exposure of cells to cold, total cellular protein p
hosphatase activity rapidly declined by 30% but all of this decline co
uld be attributed to an almost complete inhibition of protein phosphat
ase 2A (PP2A). This cold inactivation of PP2A was found to be mediated
by calcium influx and could be reproduced at 25 degrees C by treating
the cells with the calcium ionophore A23187 or with the calcium chann
el agonist Bay K8644. On exposure of cells to cold, the transcript and
protein levels of the PP2A catalytic subunit (PP2Ac) did not decline,
but the binding of anti-PP2Ac antibody to native PP2Ac increased, ind
icating a demasking of the PP2Ac epitope. The possible mechanisms by w
hich cold might inhibit PP2A are discussed.