Comparative proteomics analysis reveals differentially accumulated proteins associated with male and female A. chinensis var. chinensis bud development

Abstract Background Kiwifruit (Actinidia chinensis var. Chinensis) is abundant with vitamin C and is a rapidly developing crop in China, New Zealand, and other countries. It has been widely used as a raw material for food and kiwifruit wine. Among these, A. chinensis var. chinensis and A. chinensis...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yu Zhang, Yuexing Wang, Wanying Zhou, Shimao Zheng, Wenhui Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-04-01
Series:Proteome Science
Subjects:
Bud
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12953-021-00176-w
id doaj-2f73772e971c4b6597231cd289c83b0f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2f73772e971c4b6597231cd289c83b0f2021-04-25T11:17:35ZengBMCProteome Science1477-59562021-04-0119111210.1186/s12953-021-00176-wComparative proteomics analysis reveals differentially accumulated proteins associated with male and female A. chinensis var. chinensis bud developmentYu Zhang0Yuexing Wang1Wanying Zhou2Shimao Zheng3Wenhui Zhang4School of Biological Sciences and Engineering, Shaanxi University of TechnologyCollege of Agronomy, Xinjiang Agricultural UniversitySchool of Biological Sciences and Engineering, Shaanxi University of TechnologySchool of Biological Sciences and Engineering, Shaanxi University of TechnologyAnkang Municipaty Agricultural Sciences Rese arch InstituteAbstract Background Kiwifruit (Actinidia chinensis var. Chinensis) is abundant with vitamin C and is a rapidly developing crop in China, New Zealand, and other countries. It has been widely used as a raw material for food and kiwifruit wine. Among these, A. chinensis var. chinensis and A. chinensis var. deliciosa are the most valuable kiwifruit in production. Kiwifruit is a typical dioecious plant and its female and male plants have different economic values. Therefore, sex identification, especially at the seedling stage, has important implications for the scientific planning of its production and economic benefits. However, the kiwifruit sex regulation mechanism is very complex and molecular studies are in the initial stages. Currently, there is not a universal and effective sex identification method for A. chinensis. Methods In this study, we used a label-free quantitative proteomics approach to investigate differentially accumulated proteins, including their presence/absence and significantly different levels of abundances during A. chinensis var. chinensis male and female flower bud development. Results A total of 6485 proteins were identified, among which, 203 were identified in male buds, which were mainly associated with phenylalanine metabolism, tyrosine metabolism, and plant hormone signal transduction. In female buds, 241 were identified, which were mainly associated with the ErbB signaling pathway, growth hormone synthesis, secretion and action, and mRNA surveillance pathway. A total of 373 proteins were significantly differentially accumulated proteins (fold change > 2; P < 0.05), of which, 168 were upregulated and 205 were downregulated. Significant differences between proteins involved 13 signaling pathways, most of which were involved in flavonoid biosynthesis, phenylpropanoid biosynthesis, and starch and sucrose metabolism. Protein interaction analysis showed that enriched protein nodes included cell division cycle 5-like protein, 40S ribosomal protein S8, ribosomal protein, and 40S ribosomal protein like, which interact with 35, 25, 22, and 22 proteins, respectively. Conclusions This study provide valuable information for cloning key genes that control sex traits and functionally analyze their roles, which lay a foundation to the development of molecular markers for male and female kiwifruit identification.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12953-021-00176-wA. chinensis var. chinensisDioeciousBudLabel-free quantificationProteomicsSex differentiation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yu Zhang
Yuexing Wang
Wanying Zhou
Shimao Zheng
Wenhui Zhang
spellingShingle Yu Zhang
Yuexing Wang
Wanying Zhou
Shimao Zheng
Wenhui Zhang
Comparative proteomics analysis reveals differentially accumulated proteins associated with male and female A. chinensis var. chinensis bud development
Proteome Science
A. chinensis var. chinensis
Dioecious
Bud
Label-free quantification
Proteomics
Sex differentiation
author_facet Yu Zhang
Yuexing Wang
Wanying Zhou
Shimao Zheng
Wenhui Zhang
author_sort Yu Zhang
title Comparative proteomics analysis reveals differentially accumulated proteins associated with male and female A. chinensis var. chinensis bud development
title_short Comparative proteomics analysis reveals differentially accumulated proteins associated with male and female A. chinensis var. chinensis bud development
title_full Comparative proteomics analysis reveals differentially accumulated proteins associated with male and female A. chinensis var. chinensis bud development
title_fullStr Comparative proteomics analysis reveals differentially accumulated proteins associated with male and female A. chinensis var. chinensis bud development
title_full_unstemmed Comparative proteomics analysis reveals differentially accumulated proteins associated with male and female A. chinensis var. chinensis bud development
title_sort comparative proteomics analysis reveals differentially accumulated proteins associated with male and female a. chinensis var. chinensis bud development
publisher BMC
series Proteome Science
issn 1477-5956
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Background Kiwifruit (Actinidia chinensis var. Chinensis) is abundant with vitamin C and is a rapidly developing crop in China, New Zealand, and other countries. It has been widely used as a raw material for food and kiwifruit wine. Among these, A. chinensis var. chinensis and A. chinensis var. deliciosa are the most valuable kiwifruit in production. Kiwifruit is a typical dioecious plant and its female and male plants have different economic values. Therefore, sex identification, especially at the seedling stage, has important implications for the scientific planning of its production and economic benefits. However, the kiwifruit sex regulation mechanism is very complex and molecular studies are in the initial stages. Currently, there is not a universal and effective sex identification method for A. chinensis. Methods In this study, we used a label-free quantitative proteomics approach to investigate differentially accumulated proteins, including their presence/absence and significantly different levels of abundances during A. chinensis var. chinensis male and female flower bud development. Results A total of 6485 proteins were identified, among which, 203 were identified in male buds, which were mainly associated with phenylalanine metabolism, tyrosine metabolism, and plant hormone signal transduction. In female buds, 241 were identified, which were mainly associated with the ErbB signaling pathway, growth hormone synthesis, secretion and action, and mRNA surveillance pathway. A total of 373 proteins were significantly differentially accumulated proteins (fold change > 2; P < 0.05), of which, 168 were upregulated and 205 were downregulated. Significant differences between proteins involved 13 signaling pathways, most of which were involved in flavonoid biosynthesis, phenylpropanoid biosynthesis, and starch and sucrose metabolism. Protein interaction analysis showed that enriched protein nodes included cell division cycle 5-like protein, 40S ribosomal protein S8, ribosomal protein, and 40S ribosomal protein like, which interact with 35, 25, 22, and 22 proteins, respectively. Conclusions This study provide valuable information for cloning key genes that control sex traits and functionally analyze their roles, which lay a foundation to the development of molecular markers for male and female kiwifruit identification.
topic A. chinensis var. chinensis
Dioecious
Bud
Label-free quantification
Proteomics
Sex differentiation
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12953-021-00176-w
work_keys_str_mv AT yuzhang comparativeproteomicsanalysisrevealsdifferentiallyaccumulatedproteinsassociatedwithmaleandfemaleachinensisvarchinensisbuddevelopment
AT yuexingwang comparativeproteomicsanalysisrevealsdifferentiallyaccumulatedproteinsassociatedwithmaleandfemaleachinensisvarchinensisbuddevelopment
AT wanyingzhou comparativeproteomicsanalysisrevealsdifferentiallyaccumulatedproteinsassociatedwithmaleandfemaleachinensisvarchinensisbuddevelopment
AT shimaozheng comparativeproteomicsanalysisrevealsdifferentiallyaccumulatedproteinsassociatedwithmaleandfemaleachinensisvarchinensisbuddevelopment
AT wenhuizhang comparativeproteomicsanalysisrevealsdifferentiallyaccumulatedproteinsassociatedwithmaleandfemaleachinensisvarchinensisbuddevelopment
_version_ 1721509871998730240