| Literature DB >> 21241507 |
Luis G C Pacheco1, Susan E Slade, Núbia Seyffert, Anderson R Santos, Thiago L P Castro, Wanderson M Silva, Agenor V Santos, Simone G Santos, Luiz M Farias, Maria A R Carvalho, Adriano M C Pimenta, Roberto Meyer, Artur Silva, James H Scrivens, Sérgio C Oliveira, Anderson Miyoshi, Christopher G Dowson, Vasco Azevedo.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bacterial exported proteins represent key components of the host-pathogen interplay. Hence, we sought to implement a combined approach for characterizing the entire exoproteome of the pathogenic bacterium Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis, the etiological agent of caseous lymphadenitis (CLA) in sheep and goats.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21241507 PMCID: PMC3025830 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2180-11-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Figure 1Analysis of the extracellular proteins of two different . TPP-extracted extracellular proteins of the strains 1002 and C231 of C. pseudotuberculosis were submitted to LC-MSE analysis. The Venn-diagram shows the numbers of commonly identified and variant exoproteins between the strains. The number of replicates in which a given protein was observed, the average peptides identified per protein, and the average sequence coverage of the proteins in each exoproteome studied, are shown as frequency distributions for comparison purposes.
Figure 2Most of the identified . The proteins identified in the exoproteomes of each C. pseudotuberculosis strain were analyzed by SurfG+ and attributed a probable final sub-cellular localization. Proteins classified as having a cytoplasmic localization were further analyzed with the SecretomeP tool for prediction of non-classical (leaderless) secretion. Besides, literature evidence for exportation by non-classical pathways was also used to re-classify the cytoplasmic proteins (see text for details). SE = secreted; PSE = potentially surface exposed; C = cytoplasmic; M = membrane; NCS = non-classically secreted.
Formerly and newly identified‡ exported proteins that may be associated with the virulence phenotype of Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis strains
| Protein Descriptiona | GenBank Accession | Identified in the exoproteome of the strainb: | Orhologs found in other Corynebacteriac: | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1002 | C231 | Pathogenic | Non-pathogenic | |||
| Phospholipase D (PLD) | No | Yes | Yes | No | [ | |
| Iron siderophore binding protein (FagD) | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | [ | |
| Serine proteinase precursor (CP40) | No | Yes | No | No | [ | |
| Putative iron transport system binding (secreted) protein | No | Yes | Yes | No | [ | |
| Glycerophosphoryl diester phosphodiesterase | No | Yes | Yes | No | This work. [ | |
| Putative surface-anchored membrane protein | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | This work. | |
| Putative hydrolase (lysozyme-like) | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | This work. | |
| Putative secreted protein | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | This work. | |
| Putative sugar-binding secreted protein | No | Yes | Yes | No | This work. | |
‡ The inclusion criteria followed three main requisites: (i) experimental detection of the proteins in the exoproteomes of the pathogenic C. diphtheriae and C. jeikeium; (ii) non-detection of the proteins in the exoproteomes of the non-pathogenic C. glutamicum and C. efficiens; and (iii) in silico detection of ortholog proteins in pathogenic, but not in non-pathogenic, corynebacteria through search of similarity against public protein repositories.
a This protein list is not meant to be all-inclusive. Rather, it wants to give an overview of the exported proteins identified in this study for which it was possible to speculate on a probable involvement in C. pseudotuberculosis virulence after comparative proteomic analyses.
b Proteins identified in this study by TPP/LC-MSE
c Searches of similarity against publicly available protein databases using Blast-p.
Figure 3Differential expression of the proteins composing the core . Results are shown as natural log scale of the relative quantifications (1002:C231) for each protein. Only proteins that were given a variation score higher than 250 by PLGS quantification algorithm are presented. Proteins regulated more than 2-fold in each strain are indicated. Protein identification numbers correspond to additional files 2 and 7: Tables S1 and S4.
Figure 4Comparative analysis of corynebacterial exoproteomes. Numbers of extracellular proteins identified in previous corynebacterial exoproteome analyses [17,37,69,70] in comparison to those identified in this study with the two strains of C. pseudotuberculosis.
Figure 5Distribution of orthologous proteins of the . Pathogenic species: C. diphtheriae C7s(-)tox- and C. jeikeium K411 [17,69]; non-pathogenic species: C. glutamicum ATCC13032 and C. efficiens YS-314 [37,70]. Pie charts show Gene Ontology (GO) functional annotations for the 93 different C. pseudotuberculosis exoproteins identified (24 commonly identified in pathogenic and non-pathogenic corynebacteria; 19 commonly identified only in pathogenic corynebacteria; and 50 only identified in C. pseudotuberculosis). Annotations were obtained following analyses with the Blast2GO tool [84], used through the web application available at http://www.blast2go.org/start_blast2go.