Abstract
ABSTRACTA data-independent acquisition (DIA) assay library was generated for the liver of threespine sticklebacks to evaluate alterations in protein abundance and functional enrichment of molecular pathways following either chronic warm (25°C) or cold (7°C) three-week temperature challenge in two estuarine populations. The DIA assay library was created from a data-dependent acquisition (DDA) based raw spectral library that was filtered to remove low quality or ambiguous peptides. Functional enrichment analyses using STRING identified larger networks that were significantly enriched by examining both the entire liver proteome and only significantly elevated or depleted proteins from the various comparisons. These systems level analyses revealed the unique liver proteomic signatures of two populations of threespine sticklebacks acclimated to chronic temperature stress. The Big lagoon population (BL) had a stronger response than the Klamath river population (KL). At 7°C, BL showed alterations in protein homeostasis that likely fueled a higher demand for energy, but both populations successfully acclimated to this temperature. The warm acclimation induced major increases in proteins involved in chromatin structure and transcription, while there were decreases in proteins related to translation and fatty acid metabolism. Functional enrichment analyses of the entire liver proteome uncovered differences in glycolysis and carbohydrate metabolism between the two populations and between the cold acclimated and control groups. We conclude that the synchronous regulatory patterns of many proteins observed in the liver of threespine sticklebacks provide more comprehensive insight into population-specific responses to thermal stress than the use of less specific pre-determined biomarkers.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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