Abstract

Reversible protein phosphorylation is one of the major mechanisms in the regulation of protein expression and protein activity, controlling physiological functions of the important human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus Phosphorylations at serine, threonine and tyrosine are known to influence for example protein activity in central metabolic pathways and the more energy-rich phosphorylations at histidine, aspartate or cysteine can be found as part of two component system sensor domains or mediating bacterial virulence. In addition to these well-known phosphorylations, the phosphorylation at arginine residues plays an essential role. Hence, the deletion mutant S. aureus COL ΔptpB (protein tyrosine phosphatase B) was studied because the protein PtpB is assumed to be an arginine phosphatase. A gel-free approach was applied to analyze the changes in the phosphoproteome of the deletion mutant ΔptpB and the wild type in growing cells, thereby focusing on the occurrence of phosphorylation on arginine residues. In order to enhance the reliability of identified phosphorylation sites at arginine residues, a subset of arginine phosphorylated peptides was chemically synthesized. Combined spectral libraries based on phosphoenriched samples, synthetic arginine phosphorylated peptides and classical proteome samples provide a sophisticated tool for the analysis of arginine phosphorylations. This way, 212 proteins phosphorylated on serine, threonine, tyrosine or arginine residues were identified within the mutant ΔptpB and 102 in wild type samples. Among them, 207 arginine phosphosites were identified exclusively within the mutant ΔptpB, widely distributed along the whole bacterial metabolism. This identification of putative targets of PtpB allows further investigation of the physiological relevance of arginine phosphorylations and provides the basis for reliable quantification of arginine phosphorylations in bacteria.

Highlights

  • Staphylococcus aureus has emerged as an important human pathogen and is the causative agent of several nosocomial infections [1]

  • Among the most important topics of these mechanisms are the elements of prokaryotic signal transduction, for example proteins modified by post-translational modifications (PTMs)

  • When samples were filtered against a cut-off this strict, a high number of synthetic arginine phosphorylated peptides cannot be found within the remaining search results indicating a high number of false negatives. This is in accordance with recent studies of HartSmith et al, which indicated that global false discovery rate (FDR) estimates influence the reliability of results for modified peptides [66]

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Summary

Introduction

Staphylococcus aureus has emerged as an important human pathogen and is the causative agent of several nosocomial infections [1]. Protein activity can be regulated by several PTMs. One of the most important groups within reversible protein modifications are phosphorylations on different amino acid residues [5]. The analysis of arginine phosphorylations by mass spectrometric approaches, comes along with substantial challenges concerning the stability of the phosphoamidates [28] and the reliability of mass spectrometric results [29, 30]. Methodical improvements in this field were addressed, but still, further optimization is needed to consider the specific chemical properties of protein-N-phosphorylation. An anti-phosphoarginine-specific antibody was designed [31]

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