| Literature DB >> 31442901 |
Lunjian Chen1, Jie Liu2, Gen Kaneko3, Jun Xie1, Guangjun Wang1, Deguang Yu1, Zhifei Li1, Lingling Ma1, Da Qi2, Jingjing Tian1, Wangbao Gong1, Kai Zhang1, Ermeng Yu4.
Abstract
Fish muscle firmness is an important quality trait for consumer acceptance. Phosphorylation is known to change chemical and physical properties of proteins and is thus expected to affect muscle firmness, but only few such phosphoproteins have been identified. To explore phosphoproteins that affect fish muscle firmness, firm muscle (crisp grass carp) and soft muscle (ordinary grass carp) were analyzed by quantitative phosphoproteomics. We identified 27 up-regulated and 22 down-regulated phosphopeptides in crisp grass carp (ratio ≥1.5 or ≤0.667, and P-value < 0.05) and their potential upstream kinases. Protein-protein interaction analysis clustered these phosphoproteins into four groups, many of which have been suggested to impact muscle firmness and its postmortem changes: muscle fiber, connective tissue, carbohydrate metabolism and signal regulation. These results provide novel insights into the role of protein phosphorylation in fish muscle firmness and will contribute to the quality improvement of fish products.Entities:
Keywords: Firmness; Fish muscle; Grass carp; Phosphoproteomics; Texture; Tight junction
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31442901 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2019.125367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514