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  • Phosphorylation Dynamics Dominate the Regulated Proteome during Early Xenopus Development.

Phosphorylation Dynamics Dominate the Regulated Proteome during Early Xenopus Development.

Scientific reports (2017-11-17)
Elizabeth H Peuchen, Olivia F Cox, Liangliang Sun, Alex S Hebert, Joshua J Coon, Matthew M Champion, Norman J Dovichi, Paul W Huber
ABSTRACT

The earliest stages of animal development are largely controlled by changes in protein phosphorylation mediated by signaling pathways and cyclin-dependent kinases. In order to decipher these complex networks and to discover new aspects of regulation by this post-translational modification, we undertook an analysis of the X. laevis phosphoproteome at seven developmental stages beginning with stage VI oocytes and ending with two-cell embryos. Concurrent measurement of the proteome and phosphoproteome enabled measurement of phosphosite occupancy as a function of developmental stage. We observed little change in protein expression levels during this period. We detected the expected phosphorylation of MAP kinases, translational regulatory proteins, and subunits of APC/C that validate the accuracy of our measurements. We find that more than half the identified proteins possess multiple sites of phosphorylation that are often clustered, where kinases work together in a hierarchical manner to create stretches of phosphorylated residues, which may be a means to amplify signals or stabilize a particular protein conformation. Conversely, other proteins have opposing sites of phosphorylation that seemingly reflect distinct changes in activity during this developmental timeline.

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DL-Cysteine, technical grade