Abstract

Mycoplasma pneumoniae belongs to the Mollicutes, the group of organisms with the smallest genomes that are capable of host-independent life. These bacteria show little regulation in gene expression, suggesting an important role for the control of protein activities. We have studied protein phosphorylation in M. pneumoniae to identify phosphorylated proteins. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry allowed the detection of 63 phosphorylated proteins, many of them enzymes of central carbon metabolism and proteins related to host cell adhesion. We identified 16 phosphorylation sites, among them 8 serine and 8 threonine residues, respectively. A phosphoproteome analysis with mutants affected in the two annotated protein kinase genes or in the single known protein phosphatase gene suggested that only one protein (HPr) is phosphorylated by the HPr kinase, HPrK, whereas four adhesion-related or surface proteins were targets of the protein kinase C, PrkC. A comparison with the phosphoproteomes of other bacteria revealed that protein phosphorylation is evolutionarily only poorly conserved. Only one single protein with an identified phosphorylation site, a phosphosugar mutase (ManB in M. pneumoniae), is phosphorylated on a conserved serine residue in all studied organisms from archaea and bacteria to man. We demonstrate that this protein undergoes autophosphorylation. This explains the strong conservation of this phosphorylation event. For most other proteins, even if they are phosphorylated in different species, the actual phosphorylation sites are different. This suggests that protein phosphorylation is a form of adaptation of the bacteria to the specific needs of their particular ecological niche.

Highlights

  • Mycoplasma pneumoniae belongs to the Mollicutes, the group of organisms with the smallest genomes that are capable of host-independent life

  • We have studied the phosphoproteome of the M. pneumoniae wild type strain and of three isogenic mutants that are affected in the two protein kinases, HPr kinase (HPrK) and protein kinase C (PrkC), and in the protein phosphatase PrpC

  • Phosphoproteome of Growing M. pneumoniae Cells—In a previous study on protein phosphorylation in M. pneumoniae, no phosphorylation sites were determined, and no mutants affected in the players of protein phosphorylation were studied

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Summary

The Phosphoproteome of the Minimal Bacterium Mycoplasma pneumoniae

ANALYSIS OF THE COMPLETE KNOWN SER/THR KINOME SUGGESTS THE EXISTENCE OF NOVEL KINASES*□S. Mycoplasma pneumoniae belongs to the Mollicutes, the group of organisms with the smallest genomes that are capable of host-independent life These bacteria show little regulation in gene expression, suggesting an important role for the control of protein activities. One single protein with an identified phosphorylation site, a phosphosugar mutase (ManB in M. pneumoniae), is phosphorylated on a conserved serine residue in all studied organisms from archaea and bacteria to man. We demonstrate that this protein undergoes autophosphorylation. An in-depth analysis of the only universally conserved phosphoprotein, a phosphosugar mutase, revealed that this enzyme autophosphorylates

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
ParA family protein
Yes No
DISCUSSION
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