| Literature DB >> 28250379 |
Cécile Albenne1,2, Hervé Canut3,4, Laurent Hoffmann5,6, Elisabeth Jamet7,8.
Abstract
Plant cell wall proteomics has been a very dynamic field of research for about fifteen years. A full range of strategies has been proposed to increase the number of identified proteins and to characterize their post-translational modifications. The protocols are still improving to enlarge the coverage of cell wall proteomes. Comparisons between these proteomes have been done based on various working strategies or different physiological stages. In this review, two points are highlighted. The first point is related to data analysis with an overview of the cell wall proteomes already described. A large body of data is now available with the description of cell wall proteomes of seventeen plant species. CWP contents exhibit particularities in relation to the major differences in cell wall composition and structure between these plants and between plant organs. The second point is related to methodology and concerns the present limitations of the coverage of cell wall proteomes. Because of the variety of cell wall structures and of the diversity of protein/polysaccharide and protein/protein interactions in cell walls, some CWPs can be missing either because they are washed out during the purification of cell walls or because they are covalently linked to cell wall components.Entities:
Keywords: cell wall; plant; proteomics
Year: 2014 PMID: 28250379 PMCID: PMC5302738 DOI: 10.3390/proteomes2020224
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteomes ISSN: 2227-7382
Plant cell wall proteomics (CWPs) studies.
| Plant species | Type of proteome | Number of identified CWPs a | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dicots | |||
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| cell wall | 913 | [ |
| 200 | |||
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| xylem sap | 147 | [ |
| 92 | [ | ||
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| cell wall | nd | [ |
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| cell wall | nd | [ |
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| [ | ||
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| cell wall | nd | [ |
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| cell wall | [ | |
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| cell wall | [ | |
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| cell wall | nd | [ |
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| cell wall | nd | [ |
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| cell wall | 144 | [ |
| xylem sap | 33 | [ | |
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| cell wall | nd, 60 | [ |
| 104 | [ | ||
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| cell wall | [ | |
| Monocots | |||
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| cell wall | 689 | [ |
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| cell wall | 381 | [ |
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| cell wall | [ | |
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| cell wall, | nd | [ |
| xylem sap | nd | [ |
a All these proteomes are in the WallProtDB database (See Supplementary Material). Only proteins having a predicted signal peptide are considered (see Supplementary Material). The number of identified proteins is only mentioned when the identification has been done using homologous sequences. Otherwise, nd means that this number could not be calculated. Numbers in black correspond to the total number of proteins identified whereas numbers in bold blue correspond to numbers of different proteins identified in each species.
Figure 1Distribution of CWPs into functional classes. All the proteins have been annotated according to the presence of functional domains (see Supplementary Material), thus providing homogeneous annotations. (a) Pool of dicot proteomes; (b) Pool of monocot proteomes; (c) Pool of xylem sap proteomes.
Information about the cell wall or xylem sap proteomes used for overall comparisons.
| Stems | Leaves | Fruit pericarp | Fruit cuticle | Xylem sap | Protocols | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| x | xylem sap | [ | ||||
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| x | - cell wall preparation | [ | ||||
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| x | - cell wall preparation | [ | ||||
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| x | xylem sap | [ | ||||
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| x | chloroform extraction | [ | ||||
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| x | [ | |||||
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| x | - cell wall preparation | [ | ||||
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| x | x | - cell wall preparation | [ |
Figure 2Comparisons of cell wall proteomes of different plant tissues or organs. (a) L. esculentum fruit pericarp; (b) L. esculentum fruit cuticle; (c) B. distachyon mature leaves; (d) B. distachyon basal internodes. All the proteins have been annotated according to the presence of functional domains (see Supplementary Material).
Figure 3Comparisons of cell wall proteomes of mature leaves between a monocot and a dicot. (a) B. distachyon; (b) S. tuberosum. All the proteins have been annotated according to the presence of functional domains (see Supplementary Material).
Figure 4Diagrams indicating the number of identified flax or potato cell wall proteins in different fractions. (a) Wash and cell wall fractions from flax stem (data from [46]); (b) Cytoplasmic and cell wall fractions from potato leaves (data from [55]). The sub-cellular localization of proteins has been predicted as described in Supplementary Material. Only proteins having a predicted signal peptide and no known intracellular retention signal are considered as CWPs.
Figure 5The At5g11420 protein is localized in the cell wall (see Supplementary Material for methods). (a–f): N. benthamiana leaf epidermal cells plasmolyzed by incubation with glycerol. Cell wall localization of the At5g11420::tagRFP protein; (g–k): N. benthamiana leaf epidermal cells plasmolyzed by incubation with CaCl2. Under CaCl2 treatment the At5g11420::tagRFP protein partially relocalizes to the apoplasm; (a, g) Bright field; (b) Calcofluor labelling of the cell wall; (c, h) RFP labelling; At5g11420::tagRFP was used to observe At5g11420 protein localization. (d, i) YFP labelling; aquaporin::YFP allows plasma membrane visualization; (j) Chloroplast labeling; (e) Merge of (b) and (c); (f, k) Merge of (c) and (d) and (h) and (i), respectively. (l) Merge of (i) and (j).
Structural proteins identified in cell wall proteomes.
| Protein family | Plant | References |
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