The outer membrane of Gram-negative
bacteria plays a critical role
in protecting the cell against external stressors, including antibiotics,
and therefore is a prime target for antimicrobial discovery. To facilitate
the discovery efforts, a precise knowledge of the outer membrane proteome,
and possible variations during pathogenesis, is important. Characterization
of the bacterial outer membrane remain challenging, however, and low
throughput, due to the high hydrophobicity and relatively low abundance
of this cell compartment. Here we adapt our peptidisc-based method
to selectively isolate the outer membrane proteome before analysis
by mass spectrometry. Using a dual detergent membrane solubilization
approach, followed by protein purification in peptidiscs, we capture
over 70 outer membrane proteins, including 26 integral β-barrels
and 26 lipoproteins. Many of these proteins are present at high peptide
intensities, indicative of a high abundance in the library sample.
We further show that the isolated outer membrane proteome can be employed
in downstream ligand-binding assays. This peptidisc library made
of outer membrane proteins may therefore be useful to systematically
survey other bacterial outer membrane proteomes, but also as a nanoparticle
format able to support the discovery of next-generation antimicrobials.
Data are available via ProteomeXchange identifier PXD036749.