Rabbit seminal plasma proteome: The importance of the genetic origin

Handle

https://riunet.upv.es/handle/10251/141517

Cita bibliográfica

Casares-Crespo, L.; Fernández-Serrano, P.; Vicente Antón, JS.; Marco-Jiménez, F.; Viudes De Castro, MP. (2018). Rabbit seminal plasma proteome: The importance of the genetic origin. Animal Reproduction Science. 189:30-42. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anireprosci.2017.12.004

Titulación

Resumen

[EN] The present study was conducted to characterise rabbit seminal plasma proteins (SP proteins) focusing on the influence of the genetic origin and seasonality. In addition, ß-NGF protein quantity in SP was determined. Semen samples were recovered from January to December 2014 using 6 males belonging to genotype A and six from genotype R. For each genotype, one pooled sample at the beginning, middle and end of each season was selected to develop the experiment. A total of 24 pools (3 for each season and genetic line) were analysed. SP proteins of the two experimental groups were recovered and subjected to in-solution digestion nano LC¿MS/MS and bioinformatics analysis. The resulting library included 402 identified proteins validated with ¿95% Confidence (unused Score¿1.3). These data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD006308. Only 6 proteins were specifically implicated in reproductive processes according to Gene Ontology annotation. Twenty-three proteins were differentially expressed between genotypes, 11 over-expressed in genotype A and 12 in genotype R. Regarding the effect of season on rabbit SP proteome, results showed that there is no clear pattern of protein variation throughout the year. Similar ß-NGF relative quantity was observed between seasons and genotypes. In conclusion, this study generates the largest library of SP proteins reported to date in rabbits and provides evidence that genotype is related to a specific abundance of SP proteins.

Palabras clave

Rabbit, Seminal plasma, Proteome, Genotype, Season, LC MS/MS

ISSN

0378-4320

ISBN

Fuente

Animal Reproduction Science

DOI

10.1016/j.anireprosci.2017.12.004