Grain Sorghum
Proteomics: Integrated Approach toward
Characterization of Endosperm Storage Proteins in Kafirin Allelic
Variants
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Abstract
Grain
protein composition determines quality traits, such as value
for food, feedstock, and biomaterials uses. The major storage proteins
in sorghum are the prolamins, known as kafirins. Located primarily
on the periphery of the protein bodies surrounding starch, cysteine-rich
β- and γ-kafirins may limit enzymatic access to internally
positioned α-kafirins and starch. An integrated approach was
used to characterize sorghum with allelic variation at the kafirin
loci to determine the effects of this genetic diversity on protein
expression. Reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography
and lab-on-a-chip analysis showed reductions in alcohol-soluble protein
in β-kafirin null lines. Gel-based separation and liquid chromatography–tandem
mass spectrometry identified a range of redox active proteins affecting
storage protein biochemistry. Thioredoxin, involved in the processing
of proteins at germination, has reported impacts on grain digestibility
and was differentially expressed across genotypes. Thus, redox states
of endosperm proteins, of which kafirins are a subset, could affect
quality traits in addition to the expression of proteins