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Characterization of senescence-associated protease activities involved in the efficient protein remobilization during leaf senescence of winter oilseed rape

Abstract:
Oilseed rape (Brassica napus L.) is a crop plant characterized by a poor nitrogen (N) use efficiency that is mainly due to low N remobilization efficiency during the sequential leaf senescence of the vegetative stage. As a high leaf N remobilization efficiency was strongly linked to a high remobilization of proteins during leaf senescence of rapeseed, our objective was to identify senescence-associated protease activities implicated in the protein degradation. To reach this goal, leaf senescence processes and protease activities were investigated in a mature leaf becoming senescent in plants subjected to ample or low nitrate supply. The characterization of protease activities was performed by using in vitro analysis of RuBisCO degradation with or without inhibitors of specific protease classes followed by a protease activity profiling using activity-dependent probes. As expected, the mature leaf became senescent regardless of the nitrate treatment, and nitrate limitation enhanced the senescence processes associated with an enhanced degradation of soluble proteins. The characterization of protease activities revealed that: (i) aspartic proteases and the proteasome were active during senescence regardless of nitrate supply, and (ii) the activities of serine proteases and particularly cysteine proteases (Papain-like Cys proteases and vacuolar processing enzymes) increased when protein remobilization associated with senescence was accelerated by nitrate limitation. Short statement: Serine and particularly cysteine proteases (both PLCPs and VPEs) seem to play a crucial role in the efficient protein remobilization when leaf senescence of oilseed rape was accelerated by nitrate limitation.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1016/j.plantsci.2016.02.011

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Plant Sciences
Role:
Author


Publisher:
Elsevier
Journal:
Plant Science More from this journal
Volume:
246
Pages:
139-153
Publication date:
2016-02-16
Acceptance date:
2016-02-11
DOI:
EISSN:
1873-2259
ISSN:
0168-9452


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:612202
UUID:
uuid:11620730-e67b-4605-b168-649aebb252d7
Local pid:
pubs:612202
Source identifiers:
612202
Deposit date:
2016-05-06
ARK identifier:

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