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Isotopically Dimethyl Labeling-Based Quantitative Proteomic Analysis of Phosphoproteomes of Soybean Cultivars

Isotopically dimethyl labeling was applied in a quantitative post-translational modification (PTM) proteomic study of phosphoproteomic changes in the drought responses of two contrasting soybean cultivars. A total of 9457 phosphopeptides were identified subsequently, corresponding to 4571 phosphopro...

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Autores principales: Moradi, Atieh, Dai, Shuaijian, Wong, Emily Oi Ying, Zhu, Guang, Yu, Fengchao, Lam, Hon-Ming, Wang, Zhiyong, Burlingame, Al, Lin, Chengtao, Afsharifar, Alireza, Yu, Weichuan, Wang, Tingliang, Li, Ning
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8393417/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34439883
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom11081218
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author Moradi, Atieh
Dai, Shuaijian
Wong, Emily Oi Ying
Zhu, Guang
Yu, Fengchao
Lam, Hon-Ming
Wang, Zhiyong
Burlingame, Al
Lin, Chengtao
Afsharifar, Alireza
Yu, Weichuan
Wang, Tingliang
Li, Ning
author_facet Moradi, Atieh
Dai, Shuaijian
Wong, Emily Oi Ying
Zhu, Guang
Yu, Fengchao
Lam, Hon-Ming
Wang, Zhiyong
Burlingame, Al
Lin, Chengtao
Afsharifar, Alireza
Yu, Weichuan
Wang, Tingliang
Li, Ning
author_sort Moradi, Atieh
collection PubMed
description Isotopically dimethyl labeling was applied in a quantitative post-translational modification (PTM) proteomic study of phosphoproteomic changes in the drought responses of two contrasting soybean cultivars. A total of 9457 phosphopeptides were identified subsequently, corresponding to 4571 phosphoprotein groups and 3889 leading phosphoproteins, which contained nine kinase families consisting of 279 kinases. These phosphoproteins contained a total of 8087 phosphosites, 6106 of which were newly identified and constituted 54% of the current soybean phosphosite repository. These phosphosites were converted into the highly conserved kinase docking sites by bioinformatics analysis, which predicted six kinase families that matched with those newly found nine kinase families. The overly post-translationally modified proteins (OPP) occupies 2.1% of these leading phosphoproteins. Most of these OPPs are photoreceptors, mRNA-, histone-, and phospholipid-binding proteins, as well as protein kinase/phosphatases. The subgroup population distribution of phosphoproteins over the number of phosphosites of phosphoproteins follows the exponential decay law, Y = 4.13e(−0.098X) − 0.04. Out of 218 significantly regulated unique phosphopeptide groups, 188 phosphoproteins were regulated by the drought-tolerant cultivar under the water loss condition. These significantly regulated phosphoproteins (SRP) are mainly enriched in the biological functions of water transport and deprivation, methionine metabolic processes, photosynthesis/light reaction, and response to cadmium ion, osmotic stress, and ABA response. Seventeen and 15 SRPs are protein kinases/phosphatases and transcription factors, respectively. Bioinformatics analysis again revealed that three members of the calcium dependent protein kinase family (CAMK family), GmSRK2I, GmCIPK25, and GmAKINβ1 kinases, constitute a phosphor-relay-mediated signal transduction network, regulating ion channel activities and many nuclear events in this drought-tolerant cultivar, which presumably contributes to the development of the soybean drought tolerance under water deprivation process.
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spelling pubmed-83934172021-08-28 Isotopically Dimethyl Labeling-Based Quantitative Proteomic Analysis of Phosphoproteomes of Soybean Cultivars Moradi, Atieh Dai, Shuaijian Wong, Emily Oi Ying Zhu, Guang Yu, Fengchao Lam, Hon-Ming Wang, Zhiyong Burlingame, Al Lin, Chengtao Afsharifar, Alireza Yu, Weichuan Wang, Tingliang Li, Ning Biomolecules Article Isotopically dimethyl labeling was applied in a quantitative post-translational modification (PTM) proteomic study of phosphoproteomic changes in the drought responses of two contrasting soybean cultivars. A total of 9457 phosphopeptides were identified subsequently, corresponding to 4571 phosphoprotein groups and 3889 leading phosphoproteins, which contained nine kinase families consisting of 279 kinases. These phosphoproteins contained a total of 8087 phosphosites, 6106 of which were newly identified and constituted 54% of the current soybean phosphosite repository. These phosphosites were converted into the highly conserved kinase docking sites by bioinformatics analysis, which predicted six kinase families that matched with those newly found nine kinase families. The overly post-translationally modified proteins (OPP) occupies 2.1% of these leading phosphoproteins. Most of these OPPs are photoreceptors, mRNA-, histone-, and phospholipid-binding proteins, as well as protein kinase/phosphatases. The subgroup population distribution of phosphoproteins over the number of phosphosites of phosphoproteins follows the exponential decay law, Y = 4.13e(−0.098X) − 0.04. Out of 218 significantly regulated unique phosphopeptide groups, 188 phosphoproteins were regulated by the drought-tolerant cultivar under the water loss condition. These significantly regulated phosphoproteins (SRP) are mainly enriched in the biological functions of water transport and deprivation, methionine metabolic processes, photosynthesis/light reaction, and response to cadmium ion, osmotic stress, and ABA response. Seventeen and 15 SRPs are protein kinases/phosphatases and transcription factors, respectively. Bioinformatics analysis again revealed that three members of the calcium dependent protein kinase family (CAMK family), GmSRK2I, GmCIPK25, and GmAKINβ1 kinases, constitute a phosphor-relay-mediated signal transduction network, regulating ion channel activities and many nuclear events in this drought-tolerant cultivar, which presumably contributes to the development of the soybean drought tolerance under water deprivation process. MDPI 2021-08-16 /pmc/articles/PMC8393417/ /pubmed/34439883 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom11081218 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Moradi, Atieh
Dai, Shuaijian
Wong, Emily Oi Ying
Zhu, Guang
Yu, Fengchao
Lam, Hon-Ming
Wang, Zhiyong
Burlingame, Al
Lin, Chengtao
Afsharifar, Alireza
Yu, Weichuan
Wang, Tingliang
Li, Ning
Isotopically Dimethyl Labeling-Based Quantitative Proteomic Analysis of Phosphoproteomes of Soybean Cultivars
title Isotopically Dimethyl Labeling-Based Quantitative Proteomic Analysis of Phosphoproteomes of Soybean Cultivars
title_full Isotopically Dimethyl Labeling-Based Quantitative Proteomic Analysis of Phosphoproteomes of Soybean Cultivars
title_fullStr Isotopically Dimethyl Labeling-Based Quantitative Proteomic Analysis of Phosphoproteomes of Soybean Cultivars
title_full_unstemmed Isotopically Dimethyl Labeling-Based Quantitative Proteomic Analysis of Phosphoproteomes of Soybean Cultivars
title_short Isotopically Dimethyl Labeling-Based Quantitative Proteomic Analysis of Phosphoproteomes of Soybean Cultivars
title_sort isotopically dimethyl labeling-based quantitative proteomic analysis of phosphoproteomes of soybean cultivars
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8393417/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34439883
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom11081218
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