Affiliation:
1. Department of Animal Sciences & Genome Center University of California Davis, Meyer Hall Davis California USA
2. School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences University of Washington Tacoma Tacoma Washington USA
3. Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology University of California Santa Barbara Goleta California USA
4. Israel Oceanography & Limnological Research National Institute of Oceanography Haifa Israel
5. Helmholtz Zentrum München Regenerative Biology and Medicine Institute Munich Germany
Abstract
AbstractBotryllus schlosseri, is a model marine invertebrate for studying immunity, regeneration, and stress‐induced evolution. Conditions for validating its predicted proteome were optimized using nanoElute® 2 deep‐coverage LCMS, revealing up to 4930 protein groups and 20,984 unique peptides per sample. Spectral libraries were generated and filtered to remove interferences, low‐quality transitions, and only retain proteins with >3 unique peptides. The resulting DIA assay library enabled label‐free quantitation of 3426 protein groups represented by 22,593 unique peptides. Quantitative comparisons of single systems from a laboratory‐raised with two field‐collected populations revealed (1) a more unique proteome in the laboratory‐raised population, and (2) proteins with high/low individual variabilities in each population. DNA repair/replication, ion transport, and intracellular signaling processes were distinct in laboratory‐cultured colonies. Spliceosome and Wnt signaling proteins were the least variable (highly functionally constrained) in all populations. In conclusion, we present the first colonial tunicate's deep quantitative proteome analysis, identifying functional protein clusters associated with laboratory conditions, different habitats, and strong versus relaxed abundance constraints. These results empower research on B. schlosseri with proteomics resources and enable quantitative molecular phenotyping of changes associated with transfer from in situ to ex situ and from in vivo to in vitro culture conditions.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Bonfils-Stanton Foundation
Division of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences
United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation