Candida tropicalis belongs to the non-albicans group of Candida, and causes epidermal, mucosal, or systemic candidiasis in immunocompromised individuals. Although the prevalence of candidiasis has increased worldwide and non-albicans Candida (NAC) are becoming more significant, there are very few studies that focus on the NAC biology. Proteins and their post-translational modifications (PTMs) are an integral aspect in the pathobiology of such medically important fungi. Previously, we had reported the largest proteomic catalog of C. tropicalis. Notably, PTMs can be identified from proteomics data without a priori enrichment for a particular PTM, thus allowing broad-scale omics analyses. In this study, we developed the "PTM-Pro," a graphical user interface-based tool for identification and summary of high-confidence PTM sites based on statistical threshold of users' choice. We mined available proteomic data of C. tropicalis, and using PTM-Pro identified nearly 600 high-confidence PTM sites. The PTMs identified include phosphorylation of serine, threonine, and tyrosine; acetylation, crotonylation, methylation, and succinylation of lysine. These PTMs reside on biologically significant molecules, including histones, enzymes, and transcription factors. To our knowledge, this is the first report of PTMs in C. tropicalis and lays a foundation for future investigations of C. tropicalis PTMs. In addition, the PTM-Pro offers a graphical user interface tool for research on PTM sites in the field of proteomics.
This article describes the data obtained for global post-translational modifications (PTMs) profiled for Alzheimer's Disease (AD) from two distinct human brain regions and one cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) sample. The PTM profiling was performed to identify phosphorylation, O-GluNAcetylation, methylation, acetylation and citrullination using three publicly available LC-MS/MS raw data sets (PRIDE ID: PXD004010, PXD002516, PXD004863). A total of 1,857 PTM harbouring proteins with 4,961 unique post-translationally modified peptides were identified. Among the modified peptides, 75 corresponded uniquely to proteins identified from CSF samples. The data is related to the research article "Dissecting Alzheimer's disease molecular substrates by proteomics and discovery of novel post-translational modifications (PTMs)".
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