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1.
FEBS J ; 275(8): 1723-41, 2008 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18331355

ABSTRACT

Potato (Solanum tuberosum) is the fourth largest crop worldwide in yield, and cv. Kuras is the major starch potato of northern Europe. Storage starch is packed densely in tuber amyloplasts, which become starch granules. Amyloplasts of soil-grown mini-tubers and agar-grown micro-tubers of cv. Kuras were purified. The mini-tuber amyloplast preparation was enriched 10-20-fold and the micro-tuber amyloplast approximately fivefold over comparative total protein extracts. Proteins separated by SDS-PAGE were digested with trypsin, analysed by mass spectrometry and identified by mascot software searches against an in-house potato protein database and the NCBI non-redundant plant database. The differential growth conditions for mini- and micro-tubers gave rise to rather different protein profiles, but the major starch granule-bound proteins were identical for both and dominated by granule-bound starch synthase I, starch synthase II and alpha-glucan water dikinase. Soluble proteins were dominated by starch phosphorylase L-1, other large proteins of the classes 'starch and sucrose metabolism', 'pentose phosphate pathway', 'glycolysis', 'amino acid metabolism', and other proteins such as plastid chaperonins. The majority of the identified proteins had a predicted plastid transit peptide, supporting their presence in the amyloplast. However, several highly expressed proteins had no transit peptide, such as starch phosphorylase H, or had a predicted mitochondrial location. Intriguingly, all polyphenol oxidases, a family of enolases, one transketolase, sulfite reductase, deoxynucleoside kinase-like and dihydroxy-acid dehydrase had twin-arginine translocation motifs, and a homologue to dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase had a Sec (secretory) motif; these motifs usually target thylakoid-like structures.


Subject(s)
Plant Tubers/metabolism , Plastids/metabolism , Proteome/metabolism , Solanum tuberosum/metabolism , Mass Spectrometry , Plant Tubers/chemistry , Plastids/chemistry , Proteome/chemistry , Solanum tuberosum/chemistry , Starch/metabolism , Sucrose/metabolism
2.
J Agric Food Chem ; 54(25): 9389-97, 2006 Dec 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17147423

ABSTRACT

Potato starch production leaves behind a huge amount of juice. This juice is rich in protein, which might be exploited for food, biotechnological, and pharmaceutical applications. In northern Europe cv. Kuras is dominant for industrial starch production, and juice protein of freshly harvested mature tubers was fractionated by Superdex 200 gel filtration. The fractions were subjected to selected activity assays (patatin, peroxidase, glyoxalases I and II, alpha-mannosidase, inhibition of trypsin, Fusarium protease, and alcalase) and protein subunit size determination by SDS-PAGE and mass spectrometry. Proteins present in SDS-PAGE bands were identified by tryptic peptide mass fingerprinting. Protein complexes such as ribosomes and proteasomes eluted with the void volume of the gel filtration. Large proteins were enzymes of starch synthesis dominated by starch phosphorylase L-1 (ca. 4% of total protein). Five identified dimeric patatin variants (25%) coeluted with four monomeric lipoxygenase variants (10%) at 97 kDa. Protease inhibitor I variants (4%) at 46 kDa (hexamer) inhibited alcalase. Fourteen Kunitz protease inhibitor variants (30%) at 19 kDa inhibited trypsin and Fusarium protease. Carboxypeptidase inhibitor variants (5%) and defensins (5%) coeluted with phenolics. The native sizes and molecular properties were determined for 43 different potato tuber proteins, several for the first time.


Subject(s)
Plant Proteins/chemistry , Plant Tubers/chemistry , Solanum tuberosum/chemistry , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Molecular Weight , Peptide Mapping , Plant Proteins/isolation & purification , Plant Proteins/physiology , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization , Starch/chemistry
3.
FEBS J ; 273(15): 3569-84, 2006 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16884497

ABSTRACT

The major potato tuber proteins of the Kuras cultivar, which is the dominant cultivar used in Northern Europe for industrial starch production, were analysed using 1D and 2D gel electrophoresis. The electrophoretic patterns varied significantly depending on the method of preparation and the potato variant (Solanum tuberosum). Proteins were characterized using MS and scored against potato protein databases, derived from both 'Kuras only' and 'all potato' expressed sequence tags (EST) and full-length cDNAs. Despite the existence of approximately 180 000 ESTs, the currently available potato sequence data showed a severe under-representation of genes or long transcripts encoding proteins > 50 kDa (3.5% of all) compared with the complete proteome of Arabidopsis thaliana (33% of all). We found that patatin and Kunitz protease inhibitor (KPI) variants are extraordinarily dominant in Kuras tuber and, most significantly, that their amino acid sequences are specific to Kuras. Other proteins identified include annexin, glyoxalase I, enolase and two lipoxygenases, the sequences of which are highly conserved among potato variants. Known S. tuberosum patatins cluster into three clades all represented in Kuras. S. tuberosum KPIs cluster into more diverse clades of which five were found in Kuras tuber, including a novel clade, KPI K, found to date only in Kuras. Furthermore, protein abundance was contrasted with the levels of corresponding gene transcripts found in our previous EST and LongSAGE studies of Kuras tuber.


Subject(s)
Carboxylic Ester Hydrolases/isolation & purification , Peptides/isolation & purification , Plant Proteins/isolation & purification , Solanum tuberosum/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Carboxylic Ester Hydrolases/chemistry , Carboxylic Ester Hydrolases/pharmacology , Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional , Expressed Sequence Tags , Molecular Sequence Data , Peptides/chemistry , Peptides/pharmacology , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Plant Proteins/pharmacology , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization
4.
Anal Chem ; 76(23): 6848-52, 2004 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15571332

ABSTRACT

Significant identification of proteins by mass fingerprinting and partial sequencing of tryptic peptides is central to proteomics. However, peptide masses cluster with distances of approximately 1 Da. Expanding these clusters will give more peptides of unique masses, thereby identifying proteins with a higher significance. The mass clusters can be expanded downward by including more oxygen atoms in the peptides. Classic performic acid oxidation modifies three residues, Cys to CysO(3), Met to MetO(2), and Trp to TrpO(2). In this study, we compare the mass distributions of tryptic peptides computed from the predicted proteomes of Bacillus subtilis, Drosophila melanogaster, Arabidopsis thaliana, and Homo sapiens modified by oxidation, reduction, and reduction followed by carboxymethylation, carboxamidomethylation, or pyridylethylation. Forty to 46% of the eukaryotic tryptic peptides contain Cys, Met, or Trp. Additionally, the importance of mass accuracy of differentially modified tryptic peptides for significant protein identification by database searches was analyzed. The results show that performic acid oxidation gives markedly extended mass distributions at mass accuracies from +/-0.002 to +/-0.25 Da for the eukaryotes. The effect of the expanded mass distribution on significant protein identification was illustrated by searching simulated mass peak lists against the databases containing oxidized and reduced tryptic peptides. The specificity of formic acid oxidation was tested experimentally, and no general adverse effects were detected. Tryptic peptides provided a 100% sequence coverage of oxidized barley grain peroxidase by LC-MS, and the sequence coverages of oxidized and carboxymethylated bovine serum albumin were similar by MALDI-TOF MS analyses.


Subject(s)
Formates/chemistry , Peptide Fragments/chemistry , Amino Acids/chemistry , Animals , Arabidopsis/chemistry , Bacillus subtilis/chemistry , Cattle , Chromatography, Liquid , Databases, Protein , Drosophila melanogaster/chemistry , Humans , Mass Spectrometry , Oxidation-Reduction , Proteome , Sensitivity and Specificity , Serum Albumin, Bovine/chemistry , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization/methods
5.
Proteomics ; 4(9): 2583-93, 2004 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15352233

ABSTRACT

The Virtual Expert Mass Spectrometrist (VEMS) program package was developed for flexible, automated, and manual de novo tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) protein sequencing, and includes accessory programs for matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-mass spectrometry (MS) interpretation, and generation of protein and peptide databases. VEMS V2.0 has been developed into a fast tool for combining database-independent and -dependent protein assignments in an extended analysis of MS/MS-peptide data. MS or MS/MS data can be directly recalibrated after the first search by fitting the data to the best search result using polynomial equations. The score function is an improvement of known scoring algorithms and can be adapted for any MS instrument type. In addition, VEMS offers a novel statistical model for evaluating the significance of the protein assignment. The novel features are illustrated by the analysis of the fragmentation spectra obtained by liquid chromatrography-MS/MS analysis of peptides from an anionic peroxidase enriched protein fraction from potato root tissue. The extended analysis mode resulted in the additional assignment of spectra for nine modified tryptic peptides and nine miscleaved peptides, in addition to the 45 spectra from regular tryptic peptides. Of the nine modified peptides, three were glycosylated.


Subject(s)
Databases, Protein , Mass Spectrometry/instrumentation , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Peptides/analysis , Sequence Analysis, Protein/methods , Software , Algorithms , Amino Acid Sequence , Carbohydrate Sequence , Molecular Sequence Data , Plant Extracts/chemistry , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Reproducibility of Results , Solanum tuberosum/chemistry
6.
J Biol Chem ; 277(2): 1092-8, 2002 Jan 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11694523

ABSTRACT

The high mobility group (HMG) proteins of the HMGB family are architectural factors in eukaryotic chromatin, which are involved in the regulation of various DNA-dependent processes. We have examined the post-translational modifications of five HMGB proteins from maize suspension cultured cells, revealing that HMGB1 and HMGB2/3, but not HMGB4 and HMGB5, are phosphorylated by protein kinase CK2. The phosphorylation sites have been mapped to the acidic C-terminal domains by analysis of tryptic peptides derived from HMGB1 and HMGB2/3 using nanospray ion trap mass spectrometry. In native HMGB1, Ser(149) is constitutively phosphorylated, whereas Ser(133) and Ser(136) are differentially phosphorylated. The functional significance of the CK2-mediated phosphorylation of HMGB proteins was analyzed by circular dichroism measurements showing that the phosphorylation increases the thermal stability of the HMGB proteins. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays demonstrate that the phosphorylation reduces the affinity of the HMGB proteins for linear DNA. The specific recognition of DNA minicircles is not affected by the phosphorylation, but a different pattern of protein-DNA complexes is formed. Collectively, these findings show that phosphorylation of residues within the acidic C-terminal domain of the HMGB proteins can modulate protein stability and the DNA binding properties of the HMGB proteins.


Subject(s)
HMGB Proteins/metabolism , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism , Zea mays/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Casein Kinase II , Cells, Cultured , Circular Dichroism , DNA/metabolism , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , HMGB Proteins/genetics , Mass Spectrometry , Molecular Sequence Data , Phosphorylation , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Protein Denaturation , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Sequence Alignment , Temperature , Zea mays/cytology , Zea mays/genetics
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