Abstract

Texture is an important sensory attribute of fish affected by modifications of structural proteins in muscle architecture. To investigate the changes in protein phosphorylation during texture softening of fish, the proteins of grass carp muscle after chilling storage of 0day and 6days were compared by phosphoproteomics, and their association with texture was analyzed. Totally 1026 unique phosphopeptides on 656 phosphoproteins were identified as differential. They were mainly classified as intracellular myofibril and cytoskeleton, and extracellular matrix, of which the molecular function and biological process were binding into supramolecular assembly and myofilament contraction. The concomitant dephosphorylation of kinases and assembly regulators indicated dephosphorylation and disassembly tendency of sarcomeric architecture. Correlation analysis defined the relation between texture and dephosphorylation of myosin light chain, actin, collagen and cytoskeleton. This study revealed that protein phosphorylation may affect the texture of fish muscle through regulating sarcomeric assembly of structural proteins in muscle architecture.

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