Comparative Proteome-wide Characterization of Three Different Tissues of High-Protein Mutant and Wild Type Unravels Protein Accumulation Mechanisms in Rice Seeds

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Abstract

Improving the proteins and amino acid contents of rice seeds is one of the prime objectives of plant breeders. We recently developed an EMS mutant/high-protein mutant (HPM) of rice that exhibits 14.8% of the total protein content as compared to its parent Dharial (wild-type), which shows only 9.3% protein content in their mature seeds. However, the mechanisms underlying the higher protein accumulation in these HPM seeds remain largely elusive. Here, we utilized high-throughput proteomics to examine the differences in the proteome profiles of the embryo, endosperm, and bran tissues of Dharial and HPM seeds. Utilizing a label-free quantitative proteomic and subsequent functional analyses of the identified proteins revealed that nitrogen compound biosynthesis, intracellular transport, protein/amino acid synthesis, and photosynthesis-related proteins were specifically enriched in the endosperm and bran of the high-protein mutant seed. Our data have uncovered proteome-wide changes highlighting various functions of metabolic pathways associated with protein accumulation in rice seeds.

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Min, C. W., Gupta, R., Jung, J. Y., Rakwal, R., Kang, J. W., Cho, J. H., … Kim, S. T. (2023). Comparative Proteome-wide Characterization of Three Different Tissues of High-Protein Mutant and Wild Type Unravels Protein Accumulation Mechanisms in Rice Seeds. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 71(32), 12357–12367. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.3c01698

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