| Literature DB >> 32404185 |
Wei Liu1,2,3, Hailin Tang4, Asmaa M I Abuzeid1, Lei Tan2,3, Aibing Wang2,3, Xueping Wan5, Haoji Zhang6, Yisong Liu7,8, Guoqing Li9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sparganosis caused by Spirometra erinaceieuropaei spargana is a zoonotic parasitic infection that has been reported in many countries, including China, Japan, Thailand and Korea, as well as European countries and the USA. The biological and clinical significance of the parasite have previously been reported. Although the genomic and transcriptomic analysis of S. erinaceieuropaei provided insightful views about the development and pathogenesis of this species, little knowledge has been acquired in terms of post-translational regulation that is essential for parasite growth, development and reproduction. Here, we performed site-specific phosphoproteomic profiling, with an aim to obtain primary information about the global phosphorylation status of spargana.Entities:
Keywords: IMAC; Mass spectrometry; Phosphoproteome; Spargana; Spirometra erinaceieuropaei
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32404185 PMCID: PMC7218563 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-020-04119-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1General description of S. erinaceieuropaei spargana phosphoproteome data. a Pie chart representation of the distribution of identified phosphorylation sites. b GO term distribution of spargana phosphoproteins in three categories. GO annotation and categorization were performed using Blast2GO
Fig. 2GO enrichment analysis of the phosphoproteins. The GO analysis of the phosphoproteins falls into the following GO categories: cellular component, biological process and molecular function
Fig. 3Phosphorylation motif enrichment in S. erinaceieuropaei spargana. a Motif enrichment heat maps of the upstream and downstream amino acids of all identified phosphorylation modification sites (red indicates that the amino acid is significantly enriched near the modification site; green indicates that the amino acid is significantly reduced near the modification site). b Phosphopeptides were analyzed using motif-x webserver. The top 4 enriched motifs in phosphoserine (left) and phosphothreonine (right)
Fig. 4Enrichment analysis of GO (a), KEGG (b) and domains analysis (c) of S. erinaceieuropaei spargana phosphoproteome. Cluster membership were visualized by a heat map using the “heatmap.2” function in the gplots package in R
Function related phosphoproteins family
| Related enzyme | Phosphoproteins identified in spargana | Main function | Related species |
|---|---|---|---|
| MAP kinase (MAPK) | 18 | Invasion of parasites | |
| Tyrosine kinase (TK) | 17 | TK was paired with | |
| Protein kinase C (PKC) and A | 10 | The phosphorylation of PKC can inhibit the transformation of cercaria | |
| c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNK) | 6 | The protein is abundant in the adult and can participate in host-parasite interaction | |
| Cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) | 4 | CDK play an important role in the asexual reproduction of |