4.3 Article

A global phosphoproteomics analysis of adult Fasciola gigantica by LC-MS/MS

Journal

PARASITOLOGY RESEARCH
Volume 121, Issue 2, Pages 623-631

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00436-021-07422-2

Keywords

Fasciola gigantica; Mass spectrometry; Phosphoproteomics; Phosphoprotein; Annotation

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Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFD0501200]
  2. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions (Veterinary Medicine)

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This study has performed the first global phosphoproteomics analysis of adult Fasciola gigantica, identifying 635 phosphorylated proteins involved in various biological processes. These proteins are predominantly located in cellular components and have functions related to binding and catalytic activity.
Protein phosphorylation plays key roles in a variety of essential cellular processes. Fasciola gigantica is a tropical liver fluke causing hepatobiliary disease fascioliasis, leading to human health threats and heavy economic losses. Although the genome and protein kinases of F. gigantica provided new insights to understand the molecular biology and etiology of this parasite, there is scant knowledge of protein phosphorylation events in F. gigantica. In this study, we characterized the global phosphoproteomics of adult F. gigantica by phosphopeptide enrichment-based LC-MS/MS, a high-throughput analysis to maximize the detection of a large repertoire of phosphoproteins and phosphosites. A total of 1030 phosphopeptides with 1244 phosphosites representing 635 F. gigantica phosphoproteins were identified. The phosphoproteins were involved in a wide variety of biological processes including cellular, metabolic, and single-organism processes. Meanwhile, these proteins were found predominantly in cellular components like membranes and organelles with molecular functions of binding (51.3%) and catalytic activity (40.6%). The KEGG annotation inferred that the most enriched pathways of the phosphoproteins included tight junction, spliceosome, and RNA transport (each one contains 15 identified proteins). Combining the reports in other protozoa and helminths, the phosphoproteins identified in this work play roles in metabolic regulation and signal transduction. To our knowledge, this work performed the first global phosphoproteomics analysis of adult F. gigantica, which provides valuable information for development of intervention strategies for fascioliasis.

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