Institute of Biomaterials & Biomedical Engineering, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Biofouling. 2010 Oct;26(7):829-36. doi: 10.1080/08927014.2010.524298.
The notorious biofouling organism Dreissena polymorpha (the zebra mussel) attaches to a variety of surfaces using a byssus, a series of protein threads that connect the animal to adhesive plaques secreted onto hard substrata. Here, the use of matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) to characterize the composition of different regions of the byssus is reported. All parts of the byssus show mass peaks corresponding to small proteins in the range of 3.7-7 kDa, with distinctive differences between different regions. Indeed, spectra from thread and plaques are almost completely non-overlapping. In addition, several peaks were identified that are unique to the interfacial region of the plaque, and therefore likely represent specialized adhesive proteins. These results indicate a high level of control over the distribution of proteins, presumably with different functions, in the byssus of this freshwater species.
有恶名的生物污着生物多形斑马贻贝(贻贝)使用贻贝,一系列将动物连接到硬基质上分泌的粘性斑块的蛋白质线附着在各种表面上。在这里,报道了使用基质辅助激光解吸电离飞行时间质谱(MALDI-TOF MS)来表征贻贝不同区域组成的方法。贻贝的所有部分都显示出质量峰,对应于 3.7-7 kDa 范围内的小蛋白质,不同区域之间存在明显差异。实际上,来自线和斑块的光谱几乎完全没有重叠。此外,鉴定出几个仅存在于斑块界面区域的峰,因此可能代表专门的粘性蛋白质。这些结果表明在该淡水物种的贻贝中,对蛋白质的分布具有高度的控制能力,可能具有不同的功能。