Proteomic Analysis of the
Oil Palm Fruit Mesocarp
Reveals Elevated Oxidative Phosphorylation Activity is Critical for
Increased Storage Oil Production
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Abstract
Palm oil is a highly versatile commodity
with wide applications
in the food, cosmetics, and biofuel industries. Storage oil in the
oil palm mesocarp can make up a remarkable 80% of its dry mass, making
it the oil crop with the richest oil content in the world. As such,
there has been an ongoing interest in understanding the mechanism
of oil production in oil palm fruits. To identify the proteome changes
during oil palm fruit maturation and factors affecting oil yield in
oil palm fruits, we examined the proteomic profiles of oil palm mesocarps
at four developing stages – 12, 16, 18, and 22 weeks after
pollination – by 8-plex iTRAQ labeling coupled to 2D-LC and
MALDI-TOF/TOF MS. It was found that proteins from several important
metabolic processes, including starch and sucrose metabolism, glycolysis,
pentose phosphate shunt, fatty acid biosynthesis, and oxidative phosphorylation,
were differentially expressed in a concerted manner. These increases
led to an increase in carbon flux and a diversion of resources such
as ATP and NADH that are required for lipid biosynthesis. The temporal
proteome profiles between the high-oil-yielding (HY) and low-oil-yielding
(LY) fruits also showed significant differences in the levels of proteins
involved in the regulation of the TCA cycle and oxidative phosphorylation.
In particular, the expression level of the β subunit of the
ATP synthase complex (complex IV of the electron transport chain)
was found to be increased during fruit maturation in HY but decreased
in the LY during the fruit maturation. These results suggested that
increased energy supply is necessary for augmented oil yield in the
HY oil palm trees