Phosphoproteomic Analysis Reveals the Multiple Roles of Phosphorylation in Pathogenic Bacterium <i>Streptococcus pneumoniae</i>

Xuesong Sun(Jinan University), Feng Ge(Jinan University), Chuan‐Le Xiao(Jinan University), Xingfeng Yin(Jinan University), Ruiguang Ge(Jinan University), Liu‐Hui Zhang(Jinan University), Qing‐Yu He(Jinan University)
Journal of Proteome Research
November 8, 2009
Cited by 158

Abstract

Recent phosphoproteomic characterizations of Bacillus subtilis, Escherichia coli, Lactococcus lactis, Pseudomonas putida, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa have suggested that protein phosphorylation on serine, threonine, and tyrosine residues is a major regulatory post-translational modification in bacteria. In this study, we carried out a global and site-specific phosphoproteomic analysis on the Gram-positive pathogenic bacterium Streptococcus pneumoniae. One hundred and two unique phosphopeptides and 163 phosphorylation sites with distributions of 47%/44%/9% for Ser/Thr/Tyr phosphorylations from 84 S. pneumoniae proteins were identified through the combined use of TiO(2) enrichment and LC-MS/MS determination. The identified phosphoproteins were found to be involved in various biological processes including carbon/protein/nucleotide metabolisms, cell cycle and division regulation. A striking characteristic of S. pneumoniae phosphoproteome is the large number of multiple species-specific phosphorylated sites, indicating that high level of protein phosphorylation may play important roles in regulating many metabolic pathways and bacterial virulence.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis