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Quantitative Proteomic View on Secreted, Cell Surface-Associated, and Cytoplasmic Proteins of the Methicillin-Resistant Human PathogenStaphylococcus aureusunder Iron-Limited Conditions

Authors :
Florian-Alexander Herbst
Michael Hecker
Kristina Hempel
Dörte Becher
Martin Moche
Source :
Journal of Proteome Research. 10:1657-1666
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2011.

Abstract

Staphylococcus aureus is capable of colonizing and infecting humans by its arsenal of surface-exposed and secreted proteins. Iron-limited conditions in mammalian body fluids serve as a major environmental signal to bacteria to express virulence determinants. Here we present a comprehensive, gel-free, and GeLC-MS/MS-based quantitative proteome profiling of S. aureus under this infection-relevant situation. (14)N(15)N metabolic labeling and three complementing approaches were combined for relative quantitative analyses of surface-associated proteins. The surface-exposed and secreted proteome profiling approaches comprise trypsin shaving, biotinylation, and precipitation of the supernatant. By analysis of the outer subproteomic and cytoplasmic protein fraction, 1210 proteins could be identified including 221 surface-associated proteins. Thus, access was enabled to 70% of the predicted cell wall-associated proteins, 80% of the predicted sortase substrates, two/thirds of lipoproteins and more than 50% of secreted and cytoplasmic proteins. For iron-deficiency, 158 surface-associated proteins were quantified. Twenty-nine proteins were found in altered amounts showing particularly surface-exposed proteins strongly induced, such as the iron-regulated surface determinant proteins IsdA, IsdB, IsdC and IsdD as well as lipid-anchored iron compound-binding proteins. The work presents a crucial subject for understanding S. aureus pathophysiology by the use of methods that allow quantitative surface proteome profiling.

Details

ISSN :
15353907 and 15353893
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Proteome Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....051df7bf2de502a39cc5885d2f000e20
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/pr1009838