Unser 10. Leibniz Plant Biochemistry Symposium am 7. und 8. Mai war ein großer Erfolg. Thematisch ging es in diesem Jahr um neue Methoden und Forschungsansätze der Naturstoffchemie. Die exzellenten Vorträge über Wirkstoffe…
Omanische Heilpflanze im Fokus der Phytochemie IPB-Wissenschaftler und Partner aus Dhofar haben jüngst die omanische Heilpflanze Terminalia dhofarica unter die phytochemische Lupe genommen. Die Pflanze ist reich an…
Geschmack ist vorhersagbar: Mit FlavorMiner. FlavorMiner heißt das Tool, das IPB-Chemiker und Partner aus Kolumbien jüngst entwickelt haben. Das Programm kann, basierend auf maschinellem Lernen (KI), anhand der…
Hoehenwarter, W.; Tang, Y.; Ackermann, R.; Pleissner, K.-P.; Schmid, M.; Stein, R.; Zimny-Arndt, U.; Kumar, N. M.; Jungblut, P. R.;Identification of proteins that modify cataract of mouse eye lensProteomics85011-5024(2008)DOI: 10.1002/pmic.200800380
The occurrence of a nuclear cataract in the eye lens due to disruption of the α3C×46 connexin gene, Gja3 , is dependent on strain background in a mouse model, implicating factors that modify the pathology. The differences upon cataractogenesis in the urea soluble proteins of the lens of two mouse strains, C57BL/6J and 129/SvJ, were analyzed by a comparative proteomics approach. Determination of the complete proteome of an organ offers the opportunity to characterize at a molecular level, differences in gene expression and PTMs occurring during pathology and between individuals. The abundance of 63 protein species was altered between the strains. A unique aspect of this study is the identification of chaperonin subunit 6A, mortalin, ERp29, and syntaxin‐binding protein 6 in the eye lens. DNA polymorphisms resulting in nonconservative amino acid changes that led to altered physicochemical properties of the proteins were detected for mortalin, chaperonin subunit 6A, annexin A1, and possibly γ‐N crystallin. The results show HSP27/25 and/or ERp29 are the likely major modifying factors for cataractogenesis. Extension of the results suggests that small heat‐shock proteins have a major role for influencing cataract formation in humans.
Publikation
Hoehenwarter, W.; van Dongen, J. T.; Wienkoop, S.; Steinfath, M.; Hummel, J.; Erban, A.; Sulpice, R.; Regierer, B.; Kopka, J.; Geigenberger, P.; Weckwerth, W.;A rapid approach for phenotype-screening and database independent detection of cSNP/protein polymorphism using mass accuracy precursor alignmentProteomics84214-4225(2008)DOI: 10.1002/pmic.200701047
The dynamics of a proteome can only be addressed with large‐scale, high‐throughput methods. To cope with the inherent complexity, techniques based on targeted quantification using proteotypic peptides are arising. This is an essential systems biology approach; however, for the exploratory discovery of unexpected markers, nontargeted detection of proteins, and protein modifications is indispensable. We present a rapid label‐free shotgun proteomics approach that extracts relevant phenotype‐specific peptide product ion spectra in an automated workflow without prior identification. These product ion spectra are subsequently sequenced with database search and de novo prediction algorithms. We analyzed six potato tuber cultivars grown on three plots of two geographically separated fields in Germany. For data mining about 1.5 million spectra from 107 analyses were aligned and statistically examined in approximately 1 day. Several cultivar‐specific protein markers were detected. Based on de novo ‐sequencing a dominant protein polymorphism not detectable in the available EST‐databases was assigned exclusively to a specific potato cultivar. The approach is applicable to organisms with unsequenced or incomplete genomes and to the automated extraction of relevant mass spectra that potentially cannot be identified by genome/EST‐based search algorithms.