Archives of Biological Sciences 2011 Volume 63, Issue 3, Pages: 681-683
https://doi.org/10.2298/ABS1103681P
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Lea protein expression during cold-induced dehydration in the Arctic collembola Megaphorura arctica
Popović Ž.D. (Department of Biology and Ecology, Novi Sad)
Purać Jelena (Department of Biology and Ecology, Novi Sad)
Kojić Danijela
(Department of Biology and Ecology, Novi Sad)
Pamer Elvira L. (Department of Biology and Ecology, Novi Sad)
Worland M.R. (British Antarctic Survey, CB ET Cambridge, United Kingdom)
Blagojević D.P. (Institute for Biological Research “Siniša Stanković”, Belgrade)
Grubor-Lajšić Gordana (Department of Biology and Ecology, Novi Sad)
The Arctic springtail Megaphorura arctica (Tullberg, 1876) employs a strategy
known as cryoprotective dehydration to survive winter temperatures as low as
-25°C. During cryoprotective dehydration, water is lost from the animal to
ice in its surroundings as a result of the difference in vapour pressure
between the animal’s supercooled body fluids and ice (Worland et al., 1998;
Holmstrup and Somme, 1998). This mechanism ensures that as the habitat
temperature falls, the concentration of solutes remains high enough to
prevent freezing (Holmstrup et al., 2002). In M. arctica, accumulation of
trehalose, a cryo/anhydro protectant, occurs in parallel with dehydration.
Recent studies have identified a number of genes and cellular processes
involved in cryoprotective dehydration in M. arctica (Clark et al., 2007;
Clark et al., 2009; Purać et al., 2011). One of them includes late
embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins. This study, together with that of
Bahrndorff et al. (2008), suggests that LEA proteins may be involved in
protective dehydration in this species.
Keywords: Collembola, cryoprotective dehydration, LEA proteins, SCP, water