Tracking Pathogen Infections by Time-Resolved Chemical Proteomics.
Ying ZhangDer-Shyang KaoBing GuRajdeep BomjanMayank SrivastavaHaojie LuDaoguo ZhouWeiguo Andy TaoPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
Studying the dynamic interaction between host cells and pathogen is vital but remains technically challenging. We describe herein a time-resolved chemical proteomics strategy enabling host and pathogen temporal interaction profiling (HAPTIP) for tracking the entry of a pathogen into the host cell. A novel multifunctional chemical proteomics probe was introduced to label living bacteria followed by in vivo crosslinking of bacteria proteins to their interacting host-cell proteins at different time points initiated by UV for label-free quantitative proteomics analysis. We observed over 400 specific interacting proteins crosslinked with the probe during the formation of Salmonella-containing vacuole (SCV). This novel chemical proteomics approach provides a temporal interaction profile of host and pathogen in high throughput and would facilitate better understanding of the infection process at the molecular level.