A global Staphylococcus aureus proteome resource applied to the in vivo characterization of host-pathogen interactions

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Stephan Michalik
Maren Depke
Annette Murr
Manuela Gesell Salazar
Ulrike Kusebauch
Zhi Sun
Tanja C. Meyer
Kristin Surmann
Henrike Pförtner
Petra Hildebrandt
Stefan Weiss
Laura Marcela Palma Medina
Melanie Gutjahr
Elke Hammer
Dörte Becher
Thomas Pribyl
Sven Hammerschmidt
Eric W. Deutsch
Samuel L. Bader
Michael Hecker
Robert L. Moritz
Ulrike Mäder
Uwe Völker
Frank Schmidt
机构
[1] Department of Functional Genomics,Interfaculty Institute for Genetics and Functional Genomics
[2] University Medicine Greifswald,Institute for Microbiology
[3] Ernst-Moritz-Arndt-University,Interfaculty Institute for Genetics and Functional Genomics
[4] Department Genetics of Microorganisms,ZIK
[5] Ernst-Moritz-Arndt-University,FunGene, Interfaculty Institute for Genetics and Functional Genomics
[6] Institute for Systems Biology,undefined
[7] Department of Functional Genomics,undefined
[8] University Medicine Greifswald,undefined
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Data-independent acquisition mass spectrometry promises higher performance in terms of quantification and reproducibility compared to data-dependent acquisition mass spectrometry methods. To enable high-accuracy quantification of Staphylococcus aureus proteins, we have developed a global ion library for data-independent acquisition approaches employing high-resolution time of flight or Orbitrap instruments for this human pathogen. We applied this ion library resource to investigate the time-resolved adaptation of S. aureus to the intracellular niche in human bronchial epithelial cells and in a murine pneumonia model. In epithelial cells, abundance changes for more than 400 S. aureus proteins were quantified, revealing, e.g., the precise temporal regulation of the SigB-dependent stress response and differential regulation of translation, fermentation, and amino acid biosynthesis. Using an in vivo murine pneumonia model, our data-independent acquisition quantification analysis revealed for the first time the in vivo proteome adaptation of S. aureus. From approximately 2.15 × 105  S. aureus cells, 578 proteins were identified. Increased abundance of proteins required for oxidative stress response, amino acid biosynthesis, and fermentation together with decreased abundance of ribosomal proteins and nucleotide reductase NrdEF was observed in post-infection samples compared to the pre-infection state.
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