Abstract
Cyanobacteria represent a bacterial phyllum characteristic by the ability to photosynthesize. They are potentially applicable for the production of useful compounds but may also cause poisoning or at least health problems as they can produce cyanotoxins. The introduction of a fast methodology is important not only for fundamental taxonomic purposes, but also for reliable identifications in biological studies. In this work, we have used matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry of intact cells to study Chroococcidiopsis strains. A library of the obtained reference mass spectra containing characteristic peptide/protein profiles was examined by software tools to characterize similarities and differences applicable for diagnostics and taxonomy. Both a similarity tree and heat map constructed from the mass spectrometric data proved consistent with 16S rRNA sequencing results. We show as novelty that a binary matrix combining ferulic and sinapinic acids performs well in acquiring reproducible mass spectra of cyanobacteria. Using the matrix solvent, a protein extraction from cells was done. After polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the separated protein fractions were in-gel digested and the resulting peptides analyzed by liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry. For the first time, photosystem protein components, phycobilisome proteins, electron transport proteins, nitrogen-metabolism and nucleic acids binding-proteins, cytochromes plus other enzymes and various uncharacterized proteins could be assigned to characteristic peaks in the mass spectrometric profiles and some of them suggested as markers in addition to 30S and 50S ribosomal proteins known from previous studies employing intact cell mass spectrometry of microorganisms.
Highlights
Cyanobacteria belong to the oldest continuously living organisms on earth
We show as novelty that a binary matrix combining ferulic and sinapinic acids performs well in acquiring reproducible mass spectra of cyanobacteria
IC MALDI-MS with the harvested cyanobacterial cells was performed on Microflex LRF 20 MALDI-TOF mass spectrometer
Summary
Cyanobacteria belong to the oldest continuously living organisms on earth. First they appeared approximately 3.5 billion years ago [1]. At that time, their photoautotrophic metabolism allowed dominance. During the whole life history, they gradually adapted themselves to numerous habitats from tropical to arctic areas including both aquatic and terrestrial environments. Despite their simple prokaryotic cell structure, cyanobacteria exhibit a high morphological variability, which represented the main criterion to build up classification schemes for a long time. Due to the increasing knowledge of biodiversity, cyanobacteria have been included into the bacteriological taxonomy which pays a big attention to cellular traits characterized by microbiological methods [3]
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