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From coarse to fine: the absolute Escherichia coli proteome under diverse growth conditions.

Matteo MoriZhongge ZhangAmir Banaei-EsfahaniJean-Beno Æt LalanneHiroyuki OkanoBen C CollinsAlexander SchmidtOlga T SchubertDeok-Sun LeeGene-Wei LiRuedi AebersoldTerence HwaChristina Ludwig
Published in: Molecular systems biology (2022)
Accurate measurements of cellular protein concentrations are invaluable to quantitative studies of gene expression and physiology in living cells. Here, we developed a versatile mass spectrometric workflow based on data-independent acquisition proteomics (DIA/SWATH) together with a novel protein inference algorithm (xTop). We used this workflow to accurately quantify absolute protein abundances in Escherichia coli for > 2,000 proteins over > 60 growth conditions, including nutrient limitations, non-metabolic stresses, and non-planktonic states. The resulting high-quality dataset of protein mass fractions allowed us to characterize proteome responses from a coarse (groups of related proteins) to a fine (individual) protein level. Hereby, a plethora of novel biological findings could be elucidated, including the generic upregulation of low-abundant proteins under various metabolic limitations, the non-specificity of catabolic enzymes upregulated under carbon limitation, the lack of large-scale proteome reallocation under stress compared to nutrient limitations, as well as surprising strain-dependent effects important for biofilm formation. These results present valuable resources for the systems biology community and can be used for future multi-omics studies of gene regulation and metabolic control in E. coli.
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