Two-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis (2-D DIGE) was used to analyze human serum following the removal of albumin and five other high-abundant serum proteins. After protein removal, serum was analyzed by SDS-PAGE as a preliminary screen, and significant differences between four high-abundant protein removal methods were observed. Antibody-based albumin removal and high-abundant protein removal methods were found to be efficient and specific. To further characterize serum after protein removal, 2-D DIGE was employed, enabling multiplexed analysis of serum through the use of three fluorescent protein dyes. Comparison between crude serum and serum after removal of high-abundant proteins clearly illustrates an increase in the number of lower abundant protein spots observed. Approximately 850 protein spots were detected in crude serum whereas over 1500 protein spots were exposed following removal of six high-abundant proteins, representing a 76% increase in protein spot detection. Several proteins that showed a 2-fold increase in intensity after depletion of high-abundant proteins, as well as proteins that were depleted during abundant protein removal methods, were further characterized by mass spectrometry. This series of experiments demonstrates that high-abundant protein removal, combined with 2-D DIGE, is a practical approach for enriching and characterizing lower abundant proteins in human serum. Consequently, this methodology offers advances in proteomic characterization, and therefore, in the identification of biomarkers from human serum.
Carboxysomes are organelle-like polyhedral bodies found in cyanobacteria and many chemoautotrophic bacteria that are thought to facilitate carbon fixation. Carboxysomes are bounded by a proteinaceous outer shell and filled with ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO), the first enzyme in the CO 2 fixation pathway, but exactly how they enhance carbon fixation is unclear. Here we report the three-dimensional structure of purified carboxysomes from Synechococcus species strain WH8102 as revealed by electron cryotomography. We found that while the sizes of individual carboxysomes in this organism varied from 114 to 137 nm, surprisingly, all were approximately icosahedral. There were on average ∼250 RuBisCOs per carboxysome, organized into 3-4 concentric layers. Some models of carboxysome function depend on specific contacts between individual RuBisCOs and the shell, but no evidence of such contacts was found: no systematic patterns of connecting densities or RuBisCO positions against the shell's presumed hexagonal lattice could be discerned, and simulations showed that packing forces alone could account for the layered organization of RuBisCOs.
The Yersinia pestis proteome was studied as a function of temperature and calcium by two-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis. Over 4,100 individual protein spots were detected, of which hundreds were differentially expressed. A total of 43 differentially expressed protein spots, representing 24 unique proteins, were identified by mass spectrometry. Differences in expression were observed for several virulence-associated factors, including catalase-peroxidase (KatY), murine toxin (Ymt), plasminogen activator (Pla), and F1 capsule antigen (Caf1), as well as several putative virulence factors and membrane-bound and metabolic proteins. Differentially expressed proteins not previously reported to contribute to virulence are candidates for more detailed mechanistic studies, representing potential new virulence determinants.Yersinia pestis, the etiological agent of plague, is a gram-negative bacterium that is both a natural environmental pathogen and a biothreat agent (4,8,32). Early studies of Yersinia physiology uncovered the low calcium response (LCR), whereby bacterial cultures grown in rich medium at an elevated temperature (37°C) exhibit a growth defect upon chelation of calcium ions. The growth arrest was shown to be a result of one of the two type III secretion systems (TTSSs) in Y. pestis, the Ysc TTSS, and is responsible for the secretion of virulence factors known as Yersinia outer proteins, or Yops (21, 29; for a review, see reference 61). This TTSS can be activated in vitro and virulence factors can be released into the medium when Y. pestis is grown at 37°C with submillimolar calcium (for a review, see reference 16). Upon interaction with the host, the TTSS enables virulence factors to enter the host cell through a specialized apparatus, the injectisome (15). Once inside the host cell, Yops affect a variety of host pathways, with detectable expression changes in the pathogen as well as the host (14,52,82).The Y. pestis proteome was previously examined using twodimensional electrophoresis (57,60,71,72). These studies demonstrated that virulence factors were not induced at 26°C or 37°C in the presence of calcium concentrations similar to that found in mammalian plasma (2.5 mM) (71). More recently, the introduction of two-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis (2-D DIGE) has significantly improved the quality of gel-based proteomics through fluorescence-based multiplex analyses providing relative quantitation of expression differences and improved gel-to-gel comparisons (75). Several examples of 2-D DIGE bacterial proteomics have been reported (23), including characterizations of the gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli (1, 76, 81). Here we report the characterization of the soluble cell-associated proteome of Y. pestis as a function of temperature and calcium, which were used to effect virulence induction. Differentially expressed proteins include virulence-associated factors, membrane-bound proteins, metabolic and housekeeping proteins, and potential new virulence determinants.Bacterial ...
The open-ocean cyanobacterium Synechococcus WH8102 has recently been sequenced, making high-throughput mass spectrometry(MS)-based proteomics studies possible. Here, we used 1D and 2D gel electrophoresis, matrix-assisted laser desorptionionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) MS, and two-hybrid analysis to study the composition and protein interactions within the carboxysome, a protein-rich polyhedral body involved in the CO2-concentrating mechanism. We identified the Rubisco large and small subunits and CsoS1 and CsoS2 in the carboxysome-rich particulate fraction and thus conclude the proteins were solely associated with the carboxysome. We also determined that the carboxysome fraction contained numerous membrane-associated proteins, consistent with the presence of membrane contamination. Two-hybrid analysis indicated that CsoS2 and OrfA strongly interacted. They formed dimers and interacted with each other. To our knowledge, this is the first indication of OrfA being biochemically linked to the carboxysome. The ε-class carbonic anhydrase CsoS3 did not interact with other carboxysome components in a binary manner. CsoS3 may not interact, or it may only bind, in fully formed multiprotein complexes. Finally, growth rates and protein expression were unchanged between 100 and 750 µL·L1 CO2.Key words: proteomics, CO2-concentrating mechanism, carboxysome, cyanobacteria, Synechococcus.
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