Proteomics

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Transitions in the proteome and phospho-proteome during Xenopus laevis development.


ABSTRACT: Vertebrate development from an egg to a complex multi-tissue million-cell organism is supported by multiple phases of genome-scale remodeling of the repertoire of proteins and their post-translational modifications, yet so far we know little about these phases. In this paper we present comprehensive characterization of these processes reflected by eleven time points, approximately fifteen thousand proteins, and eleven thousand phospho-forms in three replicates. We find that the most dramatic changes to the proteome occur during the transition to functional organ systems, which occurs as the embryo becomes a tadpole. At that time the absolute amount of non-yolk protein increases two-fold, and there is a shift in the balance of expression from proteins regulating gene expression to receptors, ligands, and proteins involved in cell-cell and cell-environment interactions. Between the early and late tadpole, the median increase of membrane and secreted proteins is substantially higher than that of nuclear proteins. For the first time, we have included quantitative phospho-proteomic data across the same developmental stages. In contrast to the significant protein changes that are concentrated at the end of the time series, the most significant phosphorylation changes are concentrated in the very early stages of development. A clear exception are phosphorylations of proteins involved in gene expression; these increase just after fertilization, with patterns that are highly correlated with the underlying protein changes. To improve our interpretation of this unique data set, we created a pipeline for identifying homologous human phosphorylations from the measured Xenopus phospho-proteome. Overall, we detected many profound temporal transitions, which suggest concerted changes in developmental strategies in the embryo that are particularly pronounced once early patterning and specification are complete.

INSTRUMENT(S): Orbitrap Fusion Lumos

ORGANISM(S): Xenopus Laevis (african Clawed Frog)

TISSUE(S): Early Embryonic Cell

SUBMITTER: Matthew Sonnett  

LAB HEAD: Marc Kirschner

PROVIDER: PXD060481 | Pride | 2025-07-14

REPOSITORIES: Pride

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Transitions in the proteome and phospho-proteome during Xenopus laevis development.

Van Itallie Elizabeth E   Sonnett Matthew M   Kalocsay Marian M   Wühr Martin M   Peshkin Leonid L   Kirschner Marc W MW  

Developmental biology 20250602


Vertebrate development from an egg to a complex multi-cell organism is accompanied by multiple phases of genome-scale changes in the repertoire of proteins and their post-translational modifications. While much has been learned at the RNA level, we know less about changes at the protein level. In this paper, we present a deep analysis of changes of ∼15,000 proteins and ∼11,500 phospho-sites at 11 developmental time points in Xenopus laevis embryos ranging from the stage VI oocyte to the juvenile  ...[more]

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