Plasticity in cryoprotectant synthesis involves coordinated shunting away from pyruvate production

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Plasticity in cryoprotectant synthesis involves coordinated shunting away from pyruvate production

Authors

van der Burg, K. R. L.; Bozorgi, Y.; Gyte, K.; Roe, A.; Marshall, K. E.

Abstract

Insects living in temperate regions often accumulate a large amount of glycerol during winter to avoid freezing. This seasonal accrual of glycerol is generally produced from glycogen reserves through the pentose phosphate pathway. An alternative pathway to produce glycerol is through glycolysis, normally used for pyruvate production for eventual ATP synthesis. Aside from seasonal accumulation, some insects will also rapidly increase glycerol production as a short-term response to a sudden cold event, thereby increasing cold hardiness when necessary. In the eastern spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana, this plasticity in cold hardiness is locally adapted, where northern populations produce more glycerol upon cold shock. Here we investigate how glycerol is produced during the rapid plastic response to fluctuating cold conditions, and whether this pathway could be a target of local adaptation. After a period of repeated cold exposure, we found evidence of increased enzyme activity and increased mRNA abundance of several proteins associated with glycolysis, and a downregulation in expression of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, associated with pentose phosphate. Pyruvate production is prevented through downregulation of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. We found higher overall enzyme activity and glycerol accumulation in a northern population from Alberta, although there was no evidence of an interaction effect between population and cold shock treatment. This is one the first studies to show a mechanistic basis of such plasticity in cold hardiness.

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