Comparative Membrane Proteomics Reveals a Nonannotated E. coli Heat Shock Protein.
Peijia YuanNadia G D'LimaSarah A SlavoffPublished in: Biochemistry (2017)
Recent advances in proteomics and genomics have enabled discovery of thousands of previously nonannotated small open reading frames (smORFs) in genomes across evolutionary space. Furthermore, quantitative mass spectrometry has recently been applied to analysis of regulated smORF expression. However, bottom-up proteomics has remained relatively insensitive to membrane proteins, suggesting they may have been underdetected in previous studies. In this report, we add biochemical membrane protein enrichment to our previously developed label-free quantitative proteomics protocol, revealing a never-before-identified heat shock protein in Escherichia coli K12. This putative smORF-encoded heat shock protein, GndA, is likely to be ∼36-55 amino acids in length and contains a predicted transmembrane helix. We validate heat shock-regulated expression of the gndA smORF and demonstrate that a GndA-GFP fusion protein cofractionates with the cell membrane. Quantitative membrane proteomics therefore has the ability to reveal nonannotated small proteins that may play roles in bacterial stress responses.
Keyphrases
- heat shock protein
- label free
- heat shock
- mass spectrometry
- escherichia coli
- high resolution
- poor prognosis
- liquid chromatography
- gas chromatography
- transcription factor
- high performance liquid chromatography
- genome wide
- capillary electrophoresis
- single cell
- small molecule
- gene expression
- minimally invasive
- binding protein
- dna methylation
- staphylococcus aureus
- heat stress
- oxidative stress
- cystic fibrosis
- multidrug resistant
- case control