Root Membrane Ubiquitinome under Short-Term Osmotic Stress

Archive ouverte

Berger, Nathalie | Demolombe, Vincent | Hem, Sonia | Rofidal, Valérie | Steinmann, Laura | Krouk, Gabriel | Crabos, Amandine | Nacry, Philippe | Verdoucq, Lionel | Santoni, Veronique

Edité par CCSD ; MDPI -

International audience. Osmotic stress can be detrimental to plants, whose survival relies heavily on proteomic plasticity. Protein ubiquitination is a central post-translational modification in osmotic-mediated stress. In this study, we used the K-Ɛ-GG antibody enrichment method integrated with high-resolution mass spectrometry to compile a list of 719 ubiquitinated lysine (K-Ub) residues from 450 Arabidopsis root membrane proteins (58% of which are transmembrane proteins), thereby adding to the database of ubiquitinated substrates in plants. Although no ubiquitin (Ub) motifs could be identified, the presence of acidic residues close to K-Ub was revealed. Our ubiquitinome analysis pointed to a broad role of ubiquitination in the internalization and sorting of cargo proteins. Moreover, the simultaneous proteome and ubiquitinome quantification showed that ubiquitination is mostly not involved in membrane protein degradation in response to short osmotic treatment but that it is putatively involved in protein internalization, as described for the aquaporin PIP2;1. Our in silico analysis of ubiquitinated proteins shows that two E2 Ub-conjugating enzymes, UBC32 and UBC34, putatively target membrane proteins under osmotic stress. Finally, we revealed a positive role for UBC32 and UBC34 in primary root growth under osmotic stress.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Root membrane ubiquitinome under short-term osmotic stress

Archive ouverte | Berger, Nathalie | CCSD

NB performed the plant culture, protein extraction, immunopurification and LC-MS/MS analyses; VD analyzed the quantitative proteomics data and performed statistical analysis; SH conducted the MaxQuant analysis; VR contributed to t...

Root membrane ubiquitinome study identifies E2 Ub conjugating enzymes UBC32 and UBC34 that contribute to primary root growth under osmotic stress

Archive ouverte | Berger, Nathalie | CCSD

International audience. Osmotic stress can be detrimental to plants whose survival relies heavily on proteomic plasticity. Protein ubiquitination is a central post-translational modification in abiotic mediated stre...

Root ubiquitinome under osmotic stress. Résumés / Abstracts

Archive ouverte | Berger, Nathalie | CCSD

International audience. Osmotic stress is detrimental for the plant which survival relies heavily on proteomic plasticity. Protein ubiquitination is a central post-translational modification in osmotic mediated stre...

Chargement des enrichissements...