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- Shotgun proteomics (1)
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- Ubiquitin (1)
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- Vaccine (1)
- antimicrobial peptides (1)
- bacterial pathogens (1)
- fish vaccine (1)
- oxidativer Stress (1)
- proteomic adaptation (1)
Streptococcus pneumoniae is a commensal of the human upper respiratory tract and moreover, the
causative agent of several life-threatening diseases including pneumonia, sepsis, otitis media, and
meningitis. Due to the worldwide rise of resistance to antibiotics in pneumococci the understanding
of its physiology is of increasing importance. In this context, the analysis of the pneumococcal
proteome is helpful as comprehensive data on protein abundances in S. pneumoniae may provide
an extensive source of information to facilitate the development of new vaccines and drug
treatments.
It is known that protein phosphorylation on serine, threonine and tyrosine residues is a major
regulatory post-translational modification in pathogenic bacteria. This reversible post-translational
modification enables the translation of extracellular signals into cellular responses and therewith
adaptation to a steadily changing environment. Consequently, it is of particular interest to gather
precise information about the phosphoproteome of pneumococci. S. pneumoniae encodes a single
Serine/Threonine kinase-phosphatase couple known as StkP-PhpP.
To address the global impact and physiological importance of StkP and PhpP which are closely
linked to the regulation of cell morphology, growth and cell division in S. pneumoniae, proteomics
with an emphasis on phosphorylation and dephosphorylation events on Ser and Thr residues was
applied. Thus, the non-encapsulated pneumococcal D39Δcps strain (WT), a kinase (ΔstkP) and
phosphatase mutant (ΔphpP) were analyzed in in a mass spectrometry based label-free
quantification experiment. The global proteome analysis of the mutants deficient for stkP or phpP
already proved the essential role of StkP-PhpP in the protein regulation of the pneumococcus.
Proteins with significantly altered abundances were detected in diverse functional groups in both
mutants. Noticeable changes in the proteome of the stkP deletion mutant were observed in
metabolic processes such as “Amino acid metabolism” and also in pathways regulating genetic
and environmental information processing like “Transcription” and “Signal transduction”.
Prominent changes in the metabolism of DNA, nucleotides, carbohydrates, cofactors and vitamins
as well as in the categories “Transport and binding proteins” and “Glycan biosynthesis and
metabolism” have been additionally detected in the proteome of the phosphatase mutant. Still, the
quantitative comparison of WT and mutants revealed more significantly altered proteins in ΔphpP
than in ΔstkP. Moreover, the results indicated that the loss of function of PhpP causes an increased
abundance of proteins in the pneumococcal phosphate uptake system Pst. Furthermore, the
obtained quantitative proteomic data revealed an influence of StkP and PhpP on the twocomponent
systems ComDE, LiaRS, CiaRH, and VicRK.
Recent studies of the pneumococcal StkP/PhpP couple demonstrated that both proteins play an
essential role in cell growth, cell division and separation. Growth analyses and the phenotypic
characterization of the mutants by electron-microscopy performed within this work pointed out
that ΔphpP and ΔstkP had different growth characteristics and abnormal cell division and cell
separation. Nevertheless, the morphological effects could not be explained by changes in protein
abundances on a global scale. So, the in-depth analysis of the phosphoproteome was mandatory
to deliver further information of PhpP and StkP and their influence in cell division and
peptidoglycan synthesis by modulating proteins involved in this mechanisms.
For more detailed insights into the activity, targets and target sites of PhpP and StkP the advantages
of phosphopeptide enrichment using titanium dioxide and spectral library based data evaluation
were combined. Indeed, the application of an adapted workflow for phosphoproteome analyses
and the use of a recently constructed broad spectral library, including a large number of
phosphopeptides (504) highly enhanced the reliable and reproducible identification of
phosphorylated proteins in this work.
Finally, already known targets and target sites of StkP and PhpP, detected and described in other
studies using different experimental procedures, have been identified as a proof of principle
applying the mass spectrometry based phosphoproteome approach presented in this work.
Referring to the role of StkP in cell division and cell separation a number of proteins participating
in cell wall synthesis and cell division that are apparently phosphorylated by StkP was identified.
In comparison to StkP, the physiological function and role of the co-expressed phosphatase PhpP
is poorly understood. But, especially the list of previously unknown putative target substrates of
PhpP has been extended remarkably in this work. Among others, five proteins with direct
involvement in cell division (DivIVA, GpsB) and peptidoglycan biosynthesis (MltG, MreC, MacP)
can be found under the new putative targets of PhpP.
All in all, this work provides a complex and comprehensive protein repository of high proteome
coverage of S. pneumoniae D39 including identification of yet unknown serine/threonine/tyrosine
phosphorylation, which might contribute to support various research interests within the scientific
community and will facilitate further investigations of this important human pathogen.
Gram-negative bacteria are known to naturally produce outer membrane vesicles (OMVs), which are closed nanoparticles (10 to 450 nm) containing virulence factors and pathogen associated molecular patterns (PAMPs). For over 20 years, OMVs of Neisseria meningitidis (N. meningitidis), in combination with three purified outer membrane proteins, have been successfully used as parts of human vaccines which illustrates the safety and potential of OMV based vaccines. So far only little is known about the OMVs of fish pathogenic bacteria. The production of OMVs has been described for the fish pathogenic gram-negative bacterium Aeromonas salmonicida (A. salmonicida) which is the causative agent of furunculosis resulting in high morbidity and mortality of salmonid fish. The immunostimulatory potential of OMVs derived from A. salmonicida as well as the possibility of establishing an oral vaccine model in Oncorhynchus mykiss (O.mykiss) (Rainbow trout) has been investigated in this study by conducting in vitro and in vivo experiments. Innate immune cells such as macrophages are one of the first cells to respond to pathogens once they breach the skin barrier, therefore the monocyte/macrophage cell line RTS-11 as well as leukocytes from the head kidney, consisting of a high percentage of phagocytic cells have been investigated. Additionally, leukocytes isolated from the peritoneal cavity as the main target for injectable vaccines have been studied in the in vitro experiments. These experiments indicate that OMVs derived from A. salmonicida are recognized by the monocyte/macrophage cell line RTS-11 as well as by leukocytes from the head kidney resulting in significant changes of the mRNA expression pattern of early inflammatory markers (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, TGFβ). Having used the established peritoneal inflammation model of rainbow trout it could be shown that intraperitoneal (i.p.) vaccination of rainbow trout with OMVs results in a similar local immune response, especially in the recruitment of myeloid cells, compared to the injection of inactivated bacteria. The systemic cellular immune response differed between the two vaccine groups, even though a similar humoral immune response could be observed. Interestingly, i.p.vaccination with 10 µg of OMVs resulted in similar antibody titers as observed for fish, that were i.p. vaccinated with 108 CFU of inactivated A. salmonicida. The similar antibody titers after vaccination with OMVs might be explained by a stronger activation of CD8- T cells (likely CD4+ T cells) in the head kidney as well as in the blood in the OMV vaccinated group alone, which might result in an increased stimulation of B cells to produce antibodies.
Oral vaccination has been described as the ideal vaccination method for fish, but only few vaccines for oral application are licensed. Therefore, the established oral model for vaccination of rainbow trout with attenuated viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV) was adapted to be used for inactivated A. salmonicida, even though initial trials indicated great similarities in the cellular response after i.p. and oral vaccination with inactivated strains of A. salmonicida, particularly in the response of the myeloid cells and lymphocytes in the target organs as well as the thrombocytes in the spleen. This could not be confirmed in a second oral vaccination trial. These results show how challenging the development of oral vaccines for fish is. The main challenge is the reproducibility of reliable results, since this is influenced by the difference in uptake of vaccine pellets or antigen degradation in the gut. Future oral vaccine trials should investigate different vaccination regimes, e.g., consecutive feeding, or a different composition of vaccine pellets, in order to further investigate the possibility of establishing an oral vaccine model for trout and so that future vaccine candidates, like OMVs, can be reliably tested in fish.
Infections with bacterial pathogens are a major cause of morbidity and mortality
worldwide. Furthermore, the extensive use of antibiotics increased the frequency of infections with drug-resistant pathogens. Streptococcus pneumoniae, a major cause of
bacterial pneumonia, is among the pathogens that often show resistances. As an
additional side effect, the use of antibiotics can disrupt the patient’s intestinal microbiome, allowing Clostridioides difficile to cause severe, recurring and hard-to-treat
colitis. Hence, new antimicrobials are needed to combat infections caused by these
pathogens. A promising approach is the usage of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), defense
molecules produced by organisms from all domains of life. AMPs can specifically perforate
bacterial membranes and stimulate the overall immune response of the host.
In this work, the proteomic adaptations of S. pneumoniae to the human antimicrobial
peptides LL-37 and hBD3 were assessed by high-resolution mass spectrometry and
compared to general membrane stress, in order to evaluate the specificity of the bacterial
reactions. Furthermore, C. difficile was challenged with the Lactococcus lactis-derived
AMP nisin, and the proteomic alterations were examined. In essence, application of LL-37
and hBD3 changed the abundance of pneumococcal proteins involved in membrane
transport, including a putative AMP transporter, a protease, virulence proteins and
genetic regulators. Moreover, a challenge with LL-37 caused an increase of proteins
involved in cell surface modifications that alter the bacterial membrane charge and repel cationic molecules such as LL-37. In support of this, mutants unable to express these
proteins were more sensitive to LL-37. In contrast, general membrane stress, induced by
the application of cationic detergents, produced a diverse proteomic adjustment, though the same two-component regulatory system was activated. In C. difficile, levels of flagella proteins were significantly increased shortly after treatment with nisin, being in
accordance with subsequent electron microscopy data and pointing at a role of these
proteins in adaptation to nisin. Interestingly, a flagella-overexpressing mutant showed an
enhanced resistance towards nisin, independent of bacterial motility.
Taken together, the bacterial pathogens under investigation seem to possess
mechanisms to reduce the effect of AMPs on their physiology, a finding that should be
considered developing drugs based on AMPs. Although AMPs exhibit membrane
perturbations as a common mechanism of action, bacterial adaptation to AMPs appear
multifactorial and dependent on the exact pathogen observed and AMP used.
Posttranslational modifications are involved in the regulation of virtually all cellular processes, including immune response, nevertheless, they are also targets manipulated by invading pathogens. The first investigated example is protein citrullination which is an important posttranslational modification that acts on a multitude of processes like supervision of cell pluripotency and rheumatoid arthritis. Citrullination of targeted arginine residues is performed by the Peptidylarginine deiminase. Within the first published manuscript, being part of this thesis, it was possible to show the use of this posttranslational modification by the human pathogen Porphyromonas gingivalis to facilitate innate immune evasion at three distinct level. P. gingivalis was demonstrated to citrullinate proteins by Porphyromonas peptidylarginine deiminase resulting in diminished phagocytosis and subsequent killing by neutrophils. Furthermore, it was shown that citrullination of histone H3 enables P. gingivalis to survive in neutrophil extracellular traps and incapacitate the lysozyme-derived peptide LP9.
The second investigated posttranslational modification is ubiquitination and its role in respiratory tract infections. Ubiquitination is the covalent attachment of a small protein that consisting of only 76 amino acids to the ε-amino group of lysine residues to posttranslational modify proteins. Acute infections of the lower respiratory tract such as viral and bacterial co-infections are among the most prevalent reasons of fatal casualties worldwide. Therefore, the interactions between host and pathogens resulting in the impairment of the hosts immune response and immune evasion of the pathogens, need to be elucidated. To get new insights in the infection driven changes in protein polyubiquitination and alterations in the abundance of ubiquitin E3 ligases involved in ubiquitination, cellular proteomes were monitored in detail by high resolution mass spectrometry. Therefore, the epithelial cell lines 16HBE14o- (Manuscript II) and A549 (Manuscript III) were co-infected with influenza A virus H1N1 and Streptococcus pyogenes or Staphylococcus aureus or with influenza A virus H1N1 and Streptococcus pneumoniae, respectively. Here, it could be shown in 16HBE14o- cells that co-infection of epithelial cells is not characterized by decreased cell survival and that observable effects on the proteome and ubiquitinome are mostly additive rather than synergistic. S. pyogenes infection affected the mitochondrial function, cell-cell adhesion, endocytosis and actin organization. Viral infection affected mRNA processing and Rho signaling. Viral and bacterial co-infection was detected to affect processes that were already affected by both of the corresponding single infections. No further pathways were strongly affected by the co-infection. A similar result has been observed in A549 cells co-infected IAV and S. pneumoniae. Overrepresented gene ontology terms depict the sum of those observed in the viral and bacterial single infection. Moreover, no significant change in cell survival upon co-infection compared to single bacterial infection was noticed for A549 cells either. This led to the suggestion that co-infection of investigated epithelial cells under examined conditions possesses additive rather than synergistic effect and thus, may not worsen the outcome of the infection within the studied conditions. Infections in other systems, may provide varying results and thus should be examined in future studies.
The aquaculture industry has been consistently and successfully growing over the
years, supplying over 50% of the fish humans consume. A large part of this success is due
to the implementation of vaccination, which is by far the most reliable prophylactic method
in large-scale fish farming. Nonetheless, although recent fish vaccines have greatly
contributed to the development and sustainability of the aquaculture industry, they not
always offer sufficient protection to provide acceptable survival rates when infectious
diseases outbreaks occur. Therefore, infectious diseases and effective vaccines still
constitute major problems for aquaculture.
Different practical aspects and biological factors of fish have also contributed to the
unsuccessful outcome of fish vaccines. To date, many of the most effective vaccines for fish
are injectable, and their formulation includes aluminum or oil emulsion adjuvants. Both facts
constitute a major issue for animal welfare due to the stress and side effects they trigger.
Great strides have been made in innovative technologies for fish vaccines. However, as of
today, they are not available on the market. Thus, improvements in vaccine formulations and
delivery routes remain an open topic and leads the to-do list of science with the aquaculture
of the future.
Vaccination provides immunity against a determined pathogen, and this is inherent
to the immune system. Therefore, thorough knowledge about the fish immune system and
how it is influenced by internal and external factors will certainly support rational vaccine
design. Thereby, the immune responses triggered by a vaccine can be exhaustively
characterized, and the formulations improved in case it is needed.
Hence, the goal of this PhD thesis, is to provide knowledge to improve fish
vaccination, both in its formulation and in its efficacy, aiming to promote the rational design
of fish vaccines. Additionally, this work proposes a holistic view of fish, where the
physiology and culture conditions of the fish are the starting points for the development and
application of vaccines. Thus, concepts and considerations for rational vaccine design
specific for fish are presented here.
Article I of this thesis offers a comprehensive review on the current situation in
Chile, but also worldwide aquaculture and the challenges it must face in the future. Namely,
recurrent pathogenic outbreaks and sub-optimal levels of protection due to inefficient
vaccination. This article established an open and flexible ground upon which to reflect on
how and what to improve in fish vaccines, leading the efforts towards rational vaccine
design.
In Article II, we investigated whether the current most used vaccination route,
intraperitoneal, can be improved by reducing the side effects of adjuvants, replacing them
with in the vaccine formulations with Poly-(D,L-lactic-co-glycolic) acid (PLGA)
microparticles, that serve simultaneously as vaccine vehicle and adjuvants.
Article III summarizes the scientific literature about what is known about the teleost
thymus. From this, it became clear how external factors such as photoperiod and seasonality
can modulate this primary lymphatic organ, and probably, immune responses. These are
essential factors to consider if effective and protective vaccines are needed in species highly
influenced by the environment such as fish.
As discussed in Article III, fish are poikilotherm animals, highly sensitive to
environmental factors like light. In Article IV, we reported for the first time, light generates
daily rhythms in cells’ circulation and gene expression, entraining the trout immune
response. Therefore, “when” (time of the day) we stimulate fish matters in order to get
optimal immune responses. Article V provides valuable knowledge about what happens
with fish immune responses, against a bacterial agent, under constant cues like light/dark
cycles and temperature. Once again, “when” we stimulate fish (season), influences the fish
immune status and therefore, their immune responses.
Finally, Article VI reports, for the first time, leukocytes extracted from fins of trout
directly respond to a parasitic infection. This article supports the idea that further research
must be done on fish mucosal surfaces, since they are key to stimulating/vaccinating fish, as
they are a natural entry route for pathogens and modulate the immune responses mounted.
Overall, the information provided by these articles is highly relevant for the
aquaculture industry. Firstly, because the vaccine platform based on PLGA microparticles
is promising for the future of fish vaccination, harmful adjuvants can be avoided, while still
providing enhanced stimulation thanks to the timed-released capacity of the particles.
Additionally, they offer the possibility to adapt them to in-feed vaccine pellets, which is the
ideal delivery route for fish. Secondly, accurate vaccination protocols can be established;
vaccination should be done during daytime, and preferably during the morning, where the
physiological status of fish provide optimal conditions for induction of an ultimately
protective immune response after vaccination. Furthermore, vaccination should be done
during warm months, spring, or summertime, as apparently fish have free-run internal clocks
that negatively modulate adaptive immune responses during wintertime.
In summary, the present thesis provides a novel concept for vaccination of
aquacultured species based on new data for rational vaccine design, with optimal application
procedures based on the optimal timing (season and daytime), reduced stress by oral
application and considerations about improving “first-line defenses” by vaccination via
mucosal surfaces of gut or skin.
Streptococcus pneumoniae is one of the leading human pathogen causing morbidity and mortality worldwide. The pneumococcus can cause a variety of different diseases ranging from mild illnesses like otitis media and sinusitis to life-threatening diseases such as pneumonia, meningitis and sepsis. Mostly affected are infants, elderly and immune-suppressed patients. Although, there are vaccines against pneumococci available, still hundreds of thousands of people got infected each year. These vaccines are targeting the pneumococcal polysaccharide capsule. Because of the high number of different serotypes, it is not possible to generate a vaccine against all present serotypes. In the last years a shift to non-vaccine serotypes was noticed. This strengthens the need for the development of vaccines which do not target polysaccharides. Thus, proteins came into focus as potential new vaccine candidates or targets for drug treatment, because several proteins are highly conserved among different strains or even genera. Proteome analyses can give insights into the protein composition in a certain state of a bacterium. So, targets can be identified, which are especially expressed under infection-relevant conditions. Iron limitation is one of these conditions and the knowledge on iron acquisition in pneumococci is still limited. Iron is an essential trace element and as redox-active catalyst or as cofactor involved in various key metabolic pathway in nearly all living organisms and thus also in bacteria. For instance, iron is necessary during biosynthesis of amino acids and in electron transport as well as in DNA replication. Within the human host iron is extremely limited due to its high insolubility under physiological conditions, which is part of the nutritional immunity of its human host. Hence, bacteria had to evolve mechanism to overcome iron starvation. In this thesis the adaptation process triggered by iron limitation in the S. pneumoniae serotype 2 strain D39 was investigated in a global mass spectrometry-based proteome analysis.
In preceding growth experiments the pneumococcal growth was adapted to the needs of proteomic workflows. In order to investigate the pneumococcal response to iron limitation, the organic iron-chelating agent 2,2’-bipyridine (BIP) was applied. For the quantification of changes in protein abundances comparing stress to control conditions the very reliable and robust metabolic labeling technique Stable Isotope Labeling with Amino Acids in Cell Culture (SILAC) was used. This method requires the bacterial cultivation in a chemically defined medium, for which reason modified RPMI 1640 medium was chosen. A pooled protein extract with heavy labeled amino acids was applied as an internal standard, which included proteins expressed under control and stress condition, to control, BIP and BIP-iron-complex (BIP control experiment) samples. Samples were analyzed by liquid chromatography coupled directly to a tandem mass spectrometer. It is described that under iron-restricted conditions proteins associated to pathogenesis are higher abundant in pathogenic bacteria like Staphylococcus aureus. Hence, similar observations were expected also for the proteomic adaptation of S. pneumoniae, but the first results showed a reduction in protein abundance of virulence factors. In order to explain these results inductively-coupled-plasma mass spectrometry was executed to determine the iron concentration of chemically defined medium (CDM) used in this experiment. The analysis revealed a relatively low iron concentration of approximately 190 µg l-1. Therefore, the iron concentration of the complex medium THY, in which pneumococci are usually grown, was investigated. THY contains four-fold (740 µg l-1) more iron than the CDM. Subsequently, an additional iron limitation approach was carried out in THY. As SILAC is not applicable in complex media like THY, MaxLFQ was applied as quantification method in this case. Because two different media were used, an additional comparative proteome analysis with regard to the two investigated media was executed.
Comparing the protein composition in both cultivation media it became clear that pneumococci exhibit a totally different proteome depending on the medium. Major differences were found in metabolisms of amino acids, vitamins and cofactors as well as in pathogenesis-associated proteins. These differences have to be taken into account during the analyses of both iron limitation approaches. Overall, more proteins were identified and quantified in CDM samples. The pneumococcal adaptation to iron limitation in both media was different; especially, the alterations in protein abundances of virulence factors. In contrast to the iron limitation in CDM, proteins involved in pathogenesis were higher abundant under iron limitation in THY, which was the expected result. Because of proteomic changes of cell division and lipid metabolism involved proteins in iron-limited pneumococci in CDM, electron microscopic pictures were taken in order to proof cell morphology. The pictures showed an impaired cell division in iron-limited CDM, but not in THY medium. However, both datasets have similarities as well. Thus, the iron uptake protein PiuA is strongly increased in iron-restricted conditions and the abundance of the iron storage protein Dpr is significantly decreased in both datasets. Notably, PiuA and Dpr seem to have important roles during the pneumococcal adaptation to iron-restricted environments.
One the basis of these results, it could be shown that the proteomic response of pneumococci to iron limitation is strongly dependent to the initial iron concentration of the environment. Hence, pneumococci will adapt differently to varying niches and thus potential vaccine candidates should be expressed independently of the localization within the human host.
Reversible posttranslational modifications play an important role during the regulation of many central processes in bacterial cells. Protein phosphorylation, in particular, can influence signal transduction processes and thus enables a distinct reaction of the cell to different stress and environmental conditions. In the case of the human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus, protein phosphorylation is involved in the adaptation to changing conditions during colonisation of human hosts. For this reason, the investigation of phosphorylations in S. aureus allows a better understanding of pathophysiology and virulence of this organism. Apart from stable phosphorylations at the amino acids serine, threonine and tyrosine, insights into energy-rich phosphorylations, for instance at arginine residues, gain more and more scientific attention. For this reason, one purpose of this study was the investigation of incidence and physiological relevance of this protein modification at a global scale. Firstly, the analysis of this modification was methodically optimised resulting in the identification of eight arginine phosphorylations in wild type cells of S. aureus COL. Secondly, the deletion mutant ΔptpB missing the gene that codes for an arginine phosphatase, was analysed. The characterisation of PtpB in vitro proved its activity and specificity towards arginine phosphorylations. This enabled the global analysis of the phosphoproteome with a focus on arginine phosphorylations. In addition to the optimisation of the phosphopeptide enrichment as part of the sample preparation, the data analysis process was adapted to the special challenges of energy-rich phosphorylations. Here, classical database search was extended by spectral library based analyses. In addition, synthetic peptides allow the generation of high quality mass spectra and the verification of database based evaluation strategies to ensure the quality of the spectral library. Next, S. aureus COL was cultivated under various conditions and several subcellular fractions were analysed with the aim to cover a broad part of the proteome. The combination of the spectra of synthetic peptides, the spectra of non-phosphorylated peptides from extensive cultivation experiments and the spectra of enriched phosphopeptides rendered the construction of a spectral library possible. This contained 2,270 proteins out of which 392 were found to be phosphorylated. A comparison of the database based analysis with spectral library based analysis showed the advantages of the latter when comparing the reproducibility of biological replicates. Thereby a permanent issue in phosphoproteomics was investigated. Hence, spectral libraries were used for the analysis of the phosphoproteome of S. aureus under control and stress conditions. 215 arginine phosphosites were identified within the mutant under control conditions and 117 under oxidative stress conditions. Oxidative stress was chosen because phenotypic characterisation of the mutant revealed that the most distinct growth changes in comparison with the wild type occurred after oxidative stress. These phenotypic changes were quantitatively approached in the last part of this work. Total proteome quantification of the wild type and mutant under control and stress conditions revealed an influence of the ptpB deletion on amino acid metabolism, oxidative stress response and virulence. The quantification of phosphopeptides by means of a combination of spectral library with Census based analysis finally confirmed the observations made during total proteome quantification.
Microbial cell factories have been largely exploited for the controlled production of recombinant proteins, including industrial enzymes and biopharmaceuticals. The advent of high-throughput ‘-omics’ techniques have boosted the design of these production systems due to their valuable contribution to the field of systems metabolic engineering, a discipline integrating metabolic engineering with systems and synthetic biology. In order to thrive, the field of systems metabolic engineering needs absolute proteomics data to be generated, as proteins are the central players in the complex metabolic and adaptational networks. Due to advent of mass spectrometry-based proteomics, a substantial amount of absolute proteomic data became available in the past decade. However, membrane proteins remained inaccessible to these efforts.
Nonetheless, comparative studies targeting the membrane proteome have been quite successful in characterizing physiological processes. Hence, label-free proteomics was used in a study (Quesada-Ganuza et al, 2019 – Article I) to identify and optimize PrsA in Bacillus subtilis, for improved yield of amylase. Amylase is one of the most relevant enzymes in the biotechnological sector. By employing a label-free mass spectrometry approach targeting the membrane proteome of this bacterium, relative changes in heterologous and native levels of PrsA could be quantified. The results of this study evidenced that each PrsA shows different relative abundancies, but with no relevant impact in the yield of amylase.
Even though relative protein quantification can already provide a good visualization of the physiological changes occurring between different conditions, they are not sufficient to understand how resources are allocated in the cell under certain physiological conditions. Therefore, a global method for absolute membrane protein quantification remains the biggest requirement for systems metabolic engineering.
Hence, with this work, we successfully developed a mass spectrometry-based approach enabling the absolute quantification of membrane proteins (Antelo-Varela et al, 2019 – Article II). This study was also performed in the Gram-positive model organism Bacillus subtilis, regarded as a prolific microbial cell factory. The method developed in this work combines the comprehensiveness of shotgun proteomics with the sensitivity and accuracy of targeted mass spectrometry. Fundamental to the method is that it relies on the application of a correction and an enrichment factor to calibrate absolute membrane protein abundances derived from shotgun mass spectrometry. This has permitted, for the first time reported, the calculation of absolute membrane protein abundances in a living organism.
The newly developed approach enabled to accurately quantify ~40% of the predicted proteome of this bacterium, offering a clear visualization of the physiological rearrangements occurring upon the onset of osmotic stress. In addition, this work also provides evidence for new membrane protein stoichiometries.
Overall, this study enabled the development of a straightforward methodology long-needed in the scientific and biotechnological community and, for the first time reported, providing absolute abundances of one of the most puzzling fractions of the cell – the membrane proteome.
The next step of the work summarized here was to implement the afore described method to a biotechnological relevant strain, as absolute membrane protein abundances are essential to understand the fundamental principles of protein secretion and production stress. Hence, this work was applied in a genome-reduced B. subtilis strain, ‘midiBacillus’, expressing the major staphylococcal antigen IsaA (Antelo-Varela et al, submitted – Article III). The employed absolute membrane protein quantification methodology enabled the analysis of physiological rearrangements occurring upon the induction of heterologous protein production. This work showed that, even though IsaA was successfully secreted into the growth medium, one of the main requirements for the biotechnological sector, it was still partly accumulated in the cell membrane of this bacterium. This led to an exacerbated physiological response where membrane proteins involved in the management of secretion stress were activated. In addition, this study also showed that a rearrangement of the cell’s translocation machinery occurs upon induction of production, where a ‘game’ of in- and decrease of transporters takes place.
Anticipating the impact of genetic and environmental insults, such as the ones caused by production stress, is essential for the field of systems metabolic engineering. Thus, the highly accurate and comprehensive dataset generated during this work can be implemented in predictive mathematical models, thereby contributing in the rational design of next-generation secretion systems.