Oat AsDA1-2D enhances heat stress tolerance and negatively regulates seed-storage globulin

J Plant Physiol. 2023 May:284:153981. doi: 10.1016/j.jplph.2023.153981. Epub 2023 Apr 7.

Abstract

The importance of oats has increased because of their high nutritional value and health benefits in the human diet. High-temperature stress during the reproductive growth period has a detrimental effect on grain morphology by changing the structure and concentration of several seed-storage proteins. DA1, a conserved ubiquitin-proteasome pathway component, plays an important role in regulating grain size by controlling cell proliferation in maternal integuments during the grain-filling stage. However, there have been no reports or studies on oat DA1 genes. In this study, we identified three DA1-like genes (AsDA1-2D, AsDA1-5A, and AsDA1-1D) using genome-wide analysis. Among these, AsDA1-2D was found to be responsible for high-temperature stress tolerance via a yeast thermotolerance assay. The physical interaction of AsDA1-2D with oat-storage-globulin (AsGL-4D) and a protease inhibitor (AsPI-4D) was observed using yeast two-hybrid screening. A subcellular localization assay revealed that AsDA1-2D and its interacting proteins are localized in the cytosol and plasma membrane. An in vitro pull-down assay showed that AsDA1-2D forms a complex with both AsPI-4D and AsGL-4D. An in vitro cell-free degradation assay showed that AsGL-4D was degraded by AsDA1-2D under high-temperature conditions and that AsPI-4D inhibited the function of AsDA1-2D. These results suggest that AsDA1-2D acts as a cysteine protease and negatively regulates oat-grain-storage-globulin under heat stress.

Keywords: DA1; Globulin; Grain-filling period; High-temperature stress; Oat; Protease inhibitor.

MeSH terms

  • Avena / metabolism
  • Edible Grain / metabolism
  • Globulins* / genetics
  • Globulins* / metabolism
  • Heat-Shock Response
  • Humans
  • Saccharomyces cerevisiae / metabolism
  • Seeds / metabolism
  • Thermotolerance*

Substances

  • Globulins