4.5 Article

Proteomic survey of copper-binding proteins in Arabidopsis roots by immobilized metal affinity chromatography and mass spectrometry

Journal

PROTEOMICS
Volume 6, Issue 9, Pages 2746-2758

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pmic.200500108

Keywords

Arabidopsis; copper-binding motif; copper-binding proteins; heavy metals; immobilized metal affinity chromatography

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To plants, copper is vitally essential at low concentrations but extremely toxic at elevated concentrations. Plants have evolved a suite of mechanisms that modulate the uptake, distribution, and utilization of copper ions. These mechanisms require copper-interacting proteins for transporting, chelating, and sequestrating copper ions. In this study, we have systematically screened for copper-interacting proteins in Arabidopsis roots via copper-immobilized metal affinity chromatography (Cu-IMAC). We also compared Arabidopsis root metalloproteomes with affinity to Cu-IMAC and Zn-IMAC. From the identities of 38 protein spots with affinity to Cu-IMAC, 35 unique proteins were identified. Functional classification of these proteins includes redox/hydrolytic reactions, amino acid metabolism, glutathione metabolism, phosphorylation, translation machinery, membrane-associated proteins, and vegetative storage proteins. Potential copper-interacting motifs were predicted and scored. Six candidate motifs, H-(X)(5)-H, H-(X)(7)-H, H(X)(12)-H, H-(X)(6)-M, M-(X)(7)-H, and H-(X)(3)-C, are present in Cu-IMAC-isolated proteins with higher frequency than in the whole Arabidopsis proteome.

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