4.5 Article

An enlarged cell wall proteome of Arabidopsis thaliana rosettes

Journal

PROTEOMICS
Volume 16, Issue 24, Pages 3183-3187

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201600290

Keywords

Arabidopsis thaliana; Cell wall; Leaf; Plant proteomics; Rosette

Funding

  1. Universite Paul Sabatier (Toulouse, France)
  2. CNRS
  3. Midi-Pyrenees region
  4. Federal University of Toulouse

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Plant cells are surrounded by cell walls playing many roles during development and in response to environmental constraints. Cell walls are mainly composed of polysaccharides (cellulose, hemicelluloses and pectins), but they also contain proteins which are critical players in cell wall remodeling processes. Today, the cell wall proteome of Arabidopsis thaliana, a major dicot model plant, comprises more than 700 proteins predicted to be secreted (cell wall proteinsCWPs) identified in different organs or in cell suspension cultures. However, the cell wall proteome of rosettes is poorly represented with only 148 CWPs identified after extraction by vacuum infiltration. This new study allows enlarging its coverage. A destructive method starting with the purification of cell walls has been performed and two experiments have been compared. They differ by the presence/absence of protein separation by a short 1D-electrophoresis run prior to tryptic digestion and different gradient programs for peptide separation before mass spectrometry analysis. Altogether, the rosette cell wall proteome has been significantly enlarged to 361 CWPs, among which 213 newly identified in rosettes and 57 newly described. The identified CWPs fall in four major functional classes: 26.1% proteins acting on polysaccharides, 11.1% oxido-reductases, 14.7% proteases and 11.7% proteins possibly related to lipid metabolism.

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