Abstract
Proteomics has been applied with great potential to elucidate molecular mechanisms in plants. This is especially valid in the case of non‐model crops of which their genome has not been sequenced yet, or is not well annotated. Plantains are a kind of cooking bananas that are economically very important in Africa, India, and Latin America. The aim of this work was to characterize the fruit proteome of common dessert bananas and plantains and to identify proteins that are only encoded by the plantain genome. We present the first plantain fruit proteome. All data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD005589. Using our in‐house workflow, we found 37 alleles to be unique for plantain covered by 59 peptides. Although we do not have access (yet) to whole‐genome sequencing data from triploid banana cultivars, we show that proteomics is an easily accessible complementary alternative to detect different allele specific SNPs/SAAPs. These unique alleles might contribute toward the differences in the metabolism between dessert bananas and plantains. This dataset will stimulate further analysis by the scientific community, boost plantain research, and facilitate plantain breeding.
Highlights
Proteomics has been applied with great potential to elucidate molecular complicate the proteome analysis of crops
We used here an easy and reproducible protocol for protein extraction and identification and we present the first proteome of plantain fruits (AAB)
The mass spectrometry proteomics data have been deposited at the ProteomeXchange
Summary
Proteomics has been applied with great potential to elucidate molecular complicate the proteome analysis of crops. America.[6] Both dessert bananas and plantains are considered a non-model crop and the complexity of their genomes makes it challenging to analyze the transcriptome and the proteome.[9] We used here an easy and reproducible protocol for protein extraction and identification and we present the first proteome of plantain fruits (AAB). Using our Musa A-B database we identified in total 2144 different proteins with 0.2% FDR (Supporting Information, Table 1).
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