| Literature DB >> 35515211 |
Muhammad Syahmi Hishamuddin1, Shiou Yih Lee1, Nurulfiza Mat Isa2, Dhilia Udie Lamasudin2,3, Syafiq Asnawi Zainal Abidin4, Rozi Mohamed1.
Abstract
Mechanical wounding is the major trigger for the formation of agarwood in the tropical tree taxon Aquilaria. To understand the molecular mechanism by which Aquilaria reacts to wounding, we applied a proteomics approach using liquid chromatography electrospray-ionization coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) coupled with bioinformatics analysis and principal component analysis. Protein samples were extracted from wood tissues collected from drilled wounds on the stems of five-year old Aquilaria malaccensis. Samples were collected at different time-points of 0, 2, 6, 12, and 24 h after mechanical wounding for protein identification. Venn diagram analysis showed that 564 out of 2227 identified proteins were time-point specific proteins. GO analysis using the REViGO software (including functional proteins) supported these findings. In total, 20 wound-response proteins and one unknown protein were identified as having important roles in the signaling response to wounding, response to stress, activation of plant defense systems, and plant regeneration. The detected biological processes include brassinosteroid stimulus, polyamine catabolism, hypersensitive response, response to cadmium ions, response to oxidative stress, and malate metabolism, suggesting that the wounded trees must have undergone major plant cell damage. Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathway analysis indicated that several wound-response proteins were involved in agarwood formation. Our proteomics data thus provide useful information for understanding the wound response mechanisms that trigger agarwood formation. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 35515211 PMCID: PMC9064782 DOI: 10.1039/c8ra10616a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1A Venn diagram of Aquilaria malaccensis proteome responsive to wound at five different time-points after wounding treatment. The diagram was used to show the overlapping proteome under unwounded/control (0 h) and wounded tree samples (2, 6, 12 and 24 h). The non-overlapping segments represent the number of proteins specific to that time-point. The total number of identified proteins were 2227, of which 564 were time-point specific (TPS) proteins. The center region indicates total number of common proteins present at all time-points (606 proteins).
Fig. 2The time-point specific (TPS) proteins from Aquilaria malaccensis proteome, responsive to wound are visualized as a treemap. The interactome of enriched biological processes was obtained through REViGO analysis at (A) 0 h (unwounded control), (B) 2 h, (C) 6 h, (D) 12 h, and (E) 24 h, after wounding. The most enriched biological process is shown as larger components within the map. Treemap was constructed using REViGO (Supek et al., 2011).
Fig. 3PCA of 2 h, 6 h, 12 h and 24 h time-points post wounding. The PCA scores indicate presence of clusters representing the four groups of time-specific proteins (TPS). Scores of similar samples tend to form a cluster whereas dissimilar samples are found at greater distances. Proteins specific to 2 h, 6 h and 24 h, clustered near −1 of the PC 1 axis, while 12 h near 4 of the PC 1 axis.
List of wound-response proteins in Aquilaria malaccensis identified over different time-points after mechanical wounding using LC-MS/MS analysis
| Time-point (hours) | Protein name | Biological process | PID% | Bit score | EC number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | (1) Brassinosteroid receptor | Detection of brassinosteroid stimulus (GO:0009729) | 70 | 32.1 | 2.7.11.25 |
| (2) UDP- | Defense response by callose deposition (GO:0052542) | 84.62 | 29.5 | 5.1.3.2 | |
| Defense response to oomycetes (GO:0052542) | |||||
| (3) Cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase | Regulation of plant-type hypersensitive response (GO:0010363) | 56 | 34.7 | 1.1.1.255 | |
| Salicylic acid mediated signaling pathway (GO:0009862) | |||||
|
| |||||
| (4) Caffeoyl-3- | Polyamine catabolism (GO:0006598) | 85 | 38.9 | 2.1.1.104 | |
| (5) Unknown protein | Jasmonic acid biosynthesis (GO:0009695) | 66.67 | 30.1 | 1.13.11.12 | |
| (6) UDP-glucose 4-epimerase | Galactose biosynthesis (GO:0046369) | 5.1.3.5 | |||
| 6 | (7) Heat shock protein 70 | Response to high light intensity (GO:0009644) | 85.71 | 31.3 | |
| Response to cadmium ion (GO:0046686) | |||||
| Response to virus (GO:0009615) | |||||
| Response to endoplasmic reticulum stress (GO:0034976) | |||||
| (8) Green ripe-like 1 | Response to ethylene (GO:0009723) | 80 | 42.3 | ||
| (9) Protein transport protein | Response to salt stress (GO:0009651) | 70.59 | 32.7 | ||
| (10) Protein transport protein sec24-like at4g32640-like | Response to oxidative stress (GO:0006979) | 70.59 | 32.7 | ||
| (11) Calnexin 1 | Jasmonic acid mediated signaling pathway (GO:0009867) | 100 | 41 | ||
| (12) Malate dehydrogenase | Response to cold (GO:0009409) | 95.65 | 51 | 1.1.1.37 | |
| (13) Glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase | Malate metabolism (GO:0080093) | 85.71 | 47.6 | ||
| Regulation of photorespiration (GO:0080093) | |||||
| 12 | (14) Heat shock protein | Response to cadmium ion (GO:0046686) | 81.48 | 42.4 | |
| Response to virus (GO:0009615) | |||||
| Response to cold (GO:0009409) | |||||
| Response to salt stress (GO:0009651) | |||||
| (15) Cysteine synthase | Photosynthetic acclimation (GO:0009643) | 100 | 31.2 | 2.5.1.47 | |
| (16) Cytosolic phosphoglucomutase | Trehalose biosynthesis (GO:0005992) | 92.31 | 30.6 | 5.4.2.2 | |
| Galactose catabolism (GO:0019388) | |||||
| Starch biosynthesis (GO:0019252) | |||||
| 24 | (17) 6-Phosphogluconate dehydrogenase | Response to cadmium ion (GO:0046686) | 100 | 39.7 | 1.1.1.44 |
| Response to abscisic acid (GO:0009737) | |||||
| Response to fructose (GO:0009750) | |||||
| (18) Cysteine-rich receptor-like protein kinase | Response to chitin (GO:0010200) | 72.73 | 32.7 | ||
| Defense response to bacterium (GO:0042742) | |||||
| (19) Cysteine-rich receptor-like protein kinase | Activation of MAPKK activity (GO:0000186) | 72.73 | 39.7 | 2.7.11.25 | |
| MAPK cascade (GO:0000165) | |||||
| (20) Protein phosphatase | Protein dephosphorylation (GO:0006470) | 82.35 | 34.7 | ||
| (21) Receptor-like serine threonine protein kinase | Protein autophosphorylation (GO:0046777) | 51.85 | 37.4 |
Indicates protein identified through the KEGG pathway, which is associated to agarwood formation (Siah et al., 2016).
Fig. 4Interactive graph-based enriched gene ontology view from REViGO. The different time-points: (A) 0 h, (B) 2 h, (C) 6 h, (D) 12 h, and (E) 24 h. The bubble size indicates the frequency of the GO term. Highly similar GO terms are linked by edges in the graph, where the line width indicates the degree of similarity.