Global phosphorylation changes in plants in response to environmental stress have been relatively poorly characterized to date. Here we introduce a novel mass spectrometry- based label-free quantitation method that facilitates systematic profiling plant phosphoproteome changes with high efficiency and accuracy. This method employs synthetic peptide libraries tailored specifically as internal standards for complex phosphopeptide samples and accordingly, a local normalization algorithm, LAXIC, which calculates phosphopeptide abundance normalized locally with co-eluting library peptides. Normalization was achieved in a small time frame centered to each phosphopeptide to compensate for the diverse ion suppression effect across retention time. The label-free LAXIC method was further treated with a linear regression function to accurately measure phosphoproteome responses to osmotic stress in Arabidopsis. Among 2027 unique phosphopeptides identified and 1850 quantified phosphopeptides in Arabidopsis samples, 468 regulated phosphopeptides representing 497 phosphosites have shown significant changes. Several known and novel components in the abiotic stress pathway were identified, illustrating the capability of this method to identify critical signaling events among dynamic and complex phosphorylation. Further assessment of those regulated proteins may help shed light on phosphorylation response to osmotic stress in plants. © 2013 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Xue, L., Wang, P., Wang, L., Renzi, E., Radivojac, P., Tang, H., … Tao, W. A. (2013). Quantitative measurement of phosphoproteome response to osmotic stress in arabidopsis based on library-Assisted extracted ion chromatogram (LAXIC). Molecular and Cellular Proteomics, 12(8), 2354–2369. https://doi.org/10.1074/mcp.O113.027284
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