The Protein Composition of the Digestive Fluid from the Venus Flytrap Sheds Light on Prey Digestion Mechanisms

The Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) is one of the most well-known carnivorous plants because of its unique ability to capture small animals, usually insects or spiders, through a unique snap-trapping mechanism. The animals are subsequently killed and digested so that the plants can assimilate nutr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular & cellular proteomics 2012-11, Vol.11 (11), p.1306-1319
Hauptverfasser: Schulze, Waltraud X., Sanggaard, Kristian W., Kreuzer, Ines, Knudsen, Anders D., Bemm, Felix, Thøgersen, Ida B., Bräutigam, Andrea, Thomsen, Line R., Schliesky, Simon, Dyrlund, Thomas F., Escalante-Perez, Maria, Becker, Dirk, Schultz, Jörg, Karring, Henrik, Weber, Andreas, Højrup, Peter, Hedrich, Rainer, Enghild, Jan J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) is one of the most well-known carnivorous plants because of its unique ability to capture small animals, usually insects or spiders, through a unique snap-trapping mechanism. The animals are subsequently killed and digested so that the plants can assimilate nutrients, as they grow in mineral-deficient soils. We deep sequenced the cDNA from Dionaea traps to obtain transcript libraries, which were used in the mass spectrometry-based identification of the proteins secreted during digestion. The identified proteins consisted of peroxidases, nucleases, phosphatases, phospholipases, a glucanase, chitinases, and proteolytic enzymes, including four cysteine proteases, two aspartic proteases, and a serine carboxypeptidase. The majority of the most abundant proteins were categorized as pathogenesis-related proteins, suggesting that the plant's digestive system evolved from defense-related processes. This in-depth characterization of a highly specialized secreted fluid from a carnivorous plant provides new information about the plant's prey digestion mechanism and the evolutionary processes driving its defense pathways and nutrient acquisition.
ISSN:1535-9476
1535-9484
DOI:10.1074/mcp.M112.021006