Âé¶¹ÒùÔº

March 7, 2025

The protein that helps plants survive the cold

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
× close
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

As climate conditions become increasingly unpredictable, understanding how plants respond to cold is crucial for securing future crop resilience. In her doctoral thesis, Varvara Dikaya at Umeå University has studied the protein PORCUPINE, which plays a central role in how plants adapt to low temperatures. Her research reveals that this protein is part of multiple intertwined signaling pathways that help plants survive.

Plants cannot seek shelter from the cold—they must adapt at the cellular level. Much of the research on plant cold responses has focused on molecules such as and sugars that prevent freezing and on the core mechanisms of the temperature response. However, there are many new players that are still disconnected from the big picture.

Varvara Dikaya's sheds light on an essential part of this puzzle: RNA splicing, a process that determines which proteins are produced in a plant's cells.

"Splicing acts as a central hub controlling the information flow from DNA to RNA, defining which proteins are synthesized from a certain gene," explains Varvara Dikaya, doctoral student in the Department of Plant Âé¶¹ÒùÔºiology at UmeÃ¥ University and UmeÃ¥ Plant Science Center.

The she studied, PORCUPINE, was discovered because with a mutation in this gene became particularly cold-sensitive. The name comes from the spiky shape of the shoot tip in these mutants.

"The PORCUPINE mutant appears normal under ambient temperature conditions but cannot develop properly in the case of even a mild temperature drop. Already at 16 degrees, the mutant grows shorter roots with increased root hair density and much smaller rosettes than normal. This is very special."

Dikaya's research reveals that PORCUPINE is involved in multiple cellular processes. On the one hand, colder temperatures increase the amount of PORCUPINE RNA in cells, suggesting that more of the protein is produced. On the other hand, this protein is part of the spliceosome, a molecular complex that modifies RNA before it is translated into proteins.

Dikaya and her colleagues also identified several regulated by PORCUPINE that play key roles in how plants respond to temperature changes.

"Our findings show the complexity of the cold response in plants. It is important to understand all aspects and identify fundamental mechanisms that could be applied later on in a practical manner. Such knowledge will be essential to create more resilient plants capable of withstanding in the future, even though it is still a long way to go."

More information: Broken Sm-ring: a quest to the source of the cold sensitivity of the A. thaliana SmE1 splicing mutant. %3A1933796&dswid=-6264

Provided by Umea University

Load comments (0)

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's and . have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

fact-checked
trusted source
proofread

Get Instant Summarized Text (GIST)

The protein PORCUPINE is crucial for plant adaptation to cold temperatures, as it is involved in multiple signaling pathways and RNA splicing processes. Mutations in the PORCUPINE gene make plants more sensitive to cold, affecting root and rosette development. The protein's role in the spliceosome suggests it influences the production of other proteins essential for temperature response, highlighting its importance in developing resilient crops.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.