Plants (Jul 2021)

Optimization of Protein Isolation and Label-Free Quantitative Proteomic Analysis in Four Different Tissues of Korean Ginseng

  • Truong Van Nguyen,
  • So-Wun Kim,
  • Cheol-Woo Min,
  • Ravi Gupta,
  • Gi-Hyun Lee,
  • Jeong-Woo Jang,
  • Divya Rathi,
  • Hye-Won Shin,
  • Ju-Young Jung,
  • Ick-Hyun Jo,
  • Woo-Jong Hong,
  • Ki-Hong Jung,
  • Seungill Kim,
  • Yu-Jin Kim,
  • Sun-Tae Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants10071409
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
p. 1409

Abstract

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Korean ginseng is one of the most valuable medicinal plants worldwide. However, our understanding of ginseng proteomics is largely limited due to difficulties in the extraction and resolution of ginseng proteins because of the presence of natural contaminants such as polysaccharides, phenols, and glycosides. Here, we compared four different protein extraction methods, namely, TCA/acetone, TCA/acetone–MeOH/chloroform, phenol–TCA/acetone, and phenol–MeOH/chloroform methods. The TCA/acetone–MeOH/chloroform method displayed the highest extraction efficiency, and thus it was used for the comparative proteome profiling of leaf, root, shoot, and fruit by a label-free quantitative proteomics approach. This approach led to the identification of 2604 significantly modulated proteins among four tissues. We could pinpoint differential pathways and proteins associated with ginsenoside biosynthesis, including the methylerythritol 4–phosphate (MEP) pathway, the mevalonate (MVA) pathway, UDP-glycosyltransferases (UGTs), and oxidoreductases (CYP450s). The current study reports an efficient and reproducible method for the isolation of proteins from a wide range of ginseng tissues and provides a detailed organ-based proteome map and a more comprehensive view of enzymatic alterations in ginsenoside biosynthesis.

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