Qualitative Shotgun Proteomics Strategy for Protein Expression Profiling of Fish Otoliths

Author:

Rideout Rick M.1,Youssef Trevena N.2ORCID,Adamack Aaron T.1,John Rince3,Cohen Alejandro M.3,Fridgen Travis D.24ORCID,Banoub Joseph H.124ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Centre, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, St. John’s, NL A1C 5X1, Canada

2. Biochemistry Department, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John’s, NL A1B 3X9, Canada

3. Biological Mass Spectrometry Core Facility, Life Sciences Research Institute, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS B3H 0A8, Canada

4. Chemistry Department, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John’s, NL A1B 3X7, Canada

Abstract

Despite decades of research on fish otoliths and their capacity to serve as biochronological recorders, much remains unknown about their protein composition, the mechanisms by which proteins are incorporated into the otolith matrix, or the potential for using otolith proteins to provide insight into aspects of fish life history. We examined the protein composition of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) otoliths using a state-of-the-art shotgun proteomics approach with liquid chromatography coupled to an electrospray ionization-orbitrap tandem mass spectrometer. In addition to previously known otolith matrix proteins, we discovered over 2000 proteins not previously identified in cod otoliths and more than 1500 proteins not previously identified in any fish otoliths. These included three novel proteins (Somatolactin, F-actin-capping protein subunit beta, Annexin) primarily involved in binding calcium ions and likely mediating crystal nucleation. However, most of the otolith proteins were not necessarily related to otolith formation but rather to other aspects of fish physiology. For example, we identified sex-related biomarkers for males (SPATA6 protein) and females (Vitellogenin-2-like protein). We highlight some noteworthy classes of proteins having diverse functions; however, the primary goal here is not to discuss each protein separately. The number and diverse roles of the proteins discovered in the otoliths suggest that proteomics could reveal critical life history information from archived otolith collections that could be invaluable for understanding aspects of fish biology and population ecology. This proof-of-concept methodology paper provides a novel methodology whereby otolith proteomics can be further explored.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Materials Science (miscellaneous)

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