International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Oct 2021)

Novel Translational and Phosphorylation Modification Regulation Mechanisms of Tomato (<i>Solanum lycopersicum</i>) Fruit Ripening Revealed by Integrative Proteomics and Phosphoproteomics

  • Qiaoli Xie,
  • Yanling Tian,
  • Zongli Hu,
  • Lincheng Zhang,
  • Boyan Tang,
  • Yunshu Wang,
  • Jing Li,
  • Guoping Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222111782
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 21
p. 11782

Abstract

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The tomato is a research model for fruit-ripening, however, its fruit-ripening mechanism still needs more extensive and in-depth exploration. Here, using TMT and LC-MS, the proteome and phosphoproteome of AC++ (wild type) and rin (ripening-inhibitor) mutant fruits were studied to investigate the translation and post-translational regulation mechanisms of tomato fruit-ripening. A total of 6141 proteins and 4011 phosphorylation sites contained quantitative information. One-hundred proteins were identified in both omics’ profiles, which were mainly found in ethylene biosynthesis and signal transduction, photosynthesis regulation, carotenoid and flavonoid biosynthesis, chlorophyll degradation, ribosomal subunit expression changes, MAPK pathway, transcription factors and kinases. The affected protein levels were correlated with their corresponding gene transcript levels, such as NAC-NOR, MADS-RIN, IMA, TAGL1, MADS-MC and TDR4. Changes in the phosphorylation levels of NAC-NOR and IMA were involved in the regulation of tomato fruit-ripening. Although photosynthesis was inhibited, there were diverse primary and secondary metabolic pathways, such as glycolysis, fatty acid metabolism, vitamin metabolism and isoprenoid biosynthesis, regulated by phosphorylation. These data constitute a map of protein—protein phosphorylation in the regulation of tomato fruit-ripening, which lays the foundation for future in-depth study of the sophisticated molecular mechanisms of fruit-ripening and provide guidance for molecular breeding.

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