Proteomic analysis of differently expressed proteins in sex differentiation phases of flower buds in monoecious Pistacia chinensis Bunge: supplementary material
posted on 2019-07-12, 11:59authored byYifan Chen, Qian Bai, Funan Ruan, Shuchai Su
The Pistacia chinensis Bunge is traditionally dioecious, and the
female trees are more required to grow in practice for oil seed production. The discovery of monoecious P.
chinensis Bungein North China
provided good raw materials to study the sex differentiation process. The objective of this study was to
identify the differently expressed proteins in flower buds in two key sex
differentiation phases in monoecious P.
chinensis Bunge. Morphological
observation and paraffin section were used to determine the key phenophases,
and label-free quantitative technique was used for proteomic analysis. The
results showed that the proteins related to oxidative stress resistance
up-regulated while proteins involved in photosynthesis down-regulated during
the female primordium differentiation in bisexual flower buds of the monoecious
P. chinensis Bunge in early March, while proteins related to oxidative
stress resistance, ribosome activity, and photosynthetic function up-regulated
during the male primordium differentiation in bisexual flower buds of the
monoecious P. chinensis Bunge in late May. The most up-regulated
proteins all involved in the photosynthesis pathway in both kind of flower buds
in late May compared to those in early March, and the down-regulated proteins
all involved in the ribosome pathway. The identified differentially expressed
proteins such as the Cu/Zn superoxide dismutases may be possible molecular
markers for sex determination in monoecious P. chinensis Bunge.