MassIVE MSV000093654

Complete Public PXD047775

Dataset Accompanying "Proteomic comparison of the organic matrices from parietal and base plate of the acorn barnacle Amphibalanus amphitrite"

Description

ABSTRACT: Acorn barnacles are efficient colonizers on a wide variety of marine surfaces. As they proliferate on critical infrastructure, their settlement and growth have deleterious effects on performance. To address acorn barnacle biofouling, research has focused on the settlement and adhesion processes with the goal of informing the development of novel coatings. This effort has resulted in the discovery and characterization of several proteins found at the adhesive substrate interface, i.e. cement proteins, and a deepened understanding of the function and composition of the biomaterials within this region. While the adhesive properties at the interface are affected by the interaction between the proteins, substrate, and mechanics of the calcified base plate, little attention has been given to the interaction between the proteins and the cuticular material present at the substrate interface. Here, the proteome of the organic matrix isolated from the base plate of the acorn barnacle Amphibalanus amphitrite is compared with the chitinous and proteinaceous matrix embedded within A. amphitrite parietal plates. The objective was to gain an understanding of how the basal organic matrix may be specialized for adhesion via an in-depth comparative proteome analysis. In general, the majority of proteins identified in the parietal matrix were also found in the basal organic matrix, including nearly all those grouped in classes of cement proteins, enzymes and pheromones. However, the parietal organic matrix was enriched with cuticle-associated proteins, of which ~30% of those identified were unique to the parietal region. In contrast, ~30-40% of the protease inhibitors, enzymes, and pheromones identified in the basal organic matrix were unique to this region. Not unexpectedly, nearly 50% of the cement proteins identified in the basal region were significantly distinct from those found in the parietal region. The wider variety of identified proteins in the basal organic matrix indicates a greater diversity of biological function in the vicinity of the substrate interface where several processes related to adhesion, cuticle formation, and expansion of the base synchronize to play a key role in organism survival. [doi:10.25345/C53N20R13] [dataset license: CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0)]

Keywords: Amphibalanus amphitrite ; cement protein ; mass spectrometry ; cuticle ; chitin binding

Contact

Principal Investigators:
(in alphabetical order)
J Hervey, NRL, USA
Submitting User: jhervey4

Publications

Schultzhaus J, Hervey J, Fears K, Spillmann C.
Proteomic comparison of the organic matrices from parietal and base plates of the acorn barnacle Amphibalanus amphitrite.
Open Biol. 2024 May;14(5):230246. Epub 2024 May 29.

Schultzhaus JN, Hervey WJ IV, Fears KP, Spillmann CM.
Proteomic comparison of the organic matrices from parietal and base plate of the acorn barnacle Amphibalanus amphitrite.
Open Biology. (submitted, under final review).

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