PXD030242-1
PXD030242 is an original dataset announced via ProteomeXchange.
Dataset Summary
Title | Phosphorylation of CAD1, PLDdelta, NDT1, RPM1 proteins induced resistance in tomatoes infected by Ralstonia solanacearum |
Description | Ralstonia solanacaerum is one of the most devastating bacteria causing bacterial wilt disease in more than 200 species of plants, especially family Solanaceae. To cope with this, plants evolved different resistance mechanisms depending on the signal transduction after the perception. Phosphorylation is the central regulation of the signal transduction pathway. As the earliest signaling events are activated within minutes, we investigated comparative phosphoproteomics analysis of the stems of resistant and susceptible tomatoes at 15 min, 30 min, 24 h, and 48 h after inoculation by Ralstonia solanacearum to find out the phosphorylated proteins involved in the induced resistance. |
HostingRepository | jPOST |
AnnounceDate | 2021-12-09 |
AnnouncementXML | Submission_2021-12-09_00:48:00.891.xml |
DigitalObjectIdentifier | |
ReviewLevel | Non peer-reviewed dataset |
DatasetOrigin | Original dataset |
RepositorySupport | Unsupported dataset by repository |
PrimarySubmitter | Sittiruk Roytrakul |
SpeciesList | scientific name: cellular organisms; NCBI TaxID: 131567; |
ModificationList | S-carboxamidomethyl-L-cysteine; L-methionine sulfoxide |
Instrument | instrument |
Dataset History
Revision | Datetime | Status | ChangeLog Entry |
---|---|---|---|
0 | 2021-12-08 05:48:09 | ID requested | |
⏵ 1 | 2021-12-09 00:48:01 | announced | |
2 | 2022-09-18 03:00:09 | announced | 2022-09-18: Updated FTP location. |
Publication List
Dataset with its publication pending |
Keyword List
submitter keyword: Ralstonia solanacearum |
tomato |
Solanum lycopersicon |
Shotgun proteomics |
Contact List
Sittiruk Roytrakul | |
---|---|
lab head | |
Sittiruk Roytrakul | |
contact affiliation | BIOTEC |
dataset submitter |
Full Dataset Link List
jPOST dataset URI |
Dataset FTP location NOTE: Most web browsers have now discontinued native support for FTP access within the browser window. But you can usually install another FTP app (we recommend FileZilla) and configure your browser to launch the external application when you click on this FTP link. Or otherwise, launch an app that supports FTP (like FileZilla) and use this address: ftp://ftp.biosciencedbc.jp/archive/jpostrepos/JPST001417 |