posted on 2015-11-11, 00:00authored bySarbjeet Makkar, Rohana Liyanage, Lakshmi Kannan, Balamurugan Packialakshmi, Jack O. Lay, Narayan C. Rath
Egg shells are poultry industry byproducts
with potential for use
in various biological and agricultural applications. We have been
interested in the membranes underlying the calcareous shell as a feed
supplement, which showed potential to improve immunity and performance
of post hatch poultry. Therefore, to determine their protein and peptide
profiles, we extracted the egg shell membranes (ESM) from fresh unfertilized
eggs with methanol and guanidine hydrochloride (GdHCl) to obtain soluble
proteins for analysis by mass spectrometry. The methanol extract was
subjected to matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI),
electrospray ionization (ESI), high-performance reverse phase liquid
chromatographic separation (HPLC), and tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS)
to determine its peptide and protein profiles. The GdHCl extract was
subjected to ESI-HPLC-MS/MS following trypsin digestion of reduced/alkylated
proteins. Nine proteins from the methanol extract and >275 proteins
from the GdHCl extract were tentatively identified. The results suggested
the presence of several abundant proteins from egg whites, such as
ovoalbumin, ovotransferrin, and lysozyme as well as many others associated
with antimicrobial, biomechanical, cytoskeletal organizational, cell
signaling, and enzyme activities. Collagens, keratin, agrin, and laminin
were some of the structural proteins present in the ESM. The methanol-soluble
fraction contained several clusterin peptides and defensins, particularly,
two isoforms of gallin. The ratios of the two isoforms of gallin differed
between the membranes obtained from brown and white eggs. The high
abundance of several antimicrobial, immunomodulatory, and other bioactive
proteins in the ESM along with its potential to entrap various microbes
and antigens may make it a suitable vehicle for oral immunization
of post hatch poultry and improve their disease resistance.