Proteomic Analysis of Oil-Roasted Cashew Using a Customized Allergen-Focused Protein Database
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ABSTRACT: Cashew is one of the most prevalent causes of tree nut allergies. However, the cashew proteome is far from complete, which limits the quality of peptide identification in mass spectrometric analyses. In this study, bioinformatics tools were utilized to construct a customized cashew protein database and improve sequence quality for proteins of interest, based on a publicly available cashew genome database. As a result, two additional isoforms for cashew 2S albumins and five other isoforms for cashew 11S proteins were identified, along with several other potential allergens. Using the optimized protein database, the protein profiles of cashew nuts subjected to different oil-roasting conditions (138 °C and 166 °C for 2-10 minutes) were analyzed using discovery LC-MS/MS analysis. The results showed that cashew 2S protein is most heat-stable, followed by 11S and 7S proteins, though protein isoforms might be affected differently. Preliminary target peptide selection indicated that out of the 29 potential targets, 18 peptides were derived from the newly developed database. In the evaluation of thermal processing effects on cashew proteins, several Maillard reaction adducts were also identified. The cashew protein database developed in this study allows for comprehensive analyses of cashew proteome and development of high-quality allergen detection method.
ORGANISM(S): Anacardium Occidentale
SUBMITTER: Shimin Chen
PROVIDER: PXD030375 | panorama | Sun Sep 25 00:00:00 BST 2022
REPOSITORIES: PanoramaPublic
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