Marlène S. Birk , Philipp Walch , Tarik Baykara , Stephanie Sefried , Jan Amelang , Elena Buerova , Ingrid Breuer , Jörg Vervoorts , Athanasios Typas , Mikhail M. Savitski , André Mateus , Joel Selkrig
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Intracellular bacterial pathogens hijack the protein machinery of infected host cells to evade their defenses and cultivate a favorable intracellular niche. The intracellular pathogen Salmonella enterica subsp. Typhimurium (STm) achieves this by injecting a cocktail of effector proteins into host cells that modify the activity of target host proteins. Yet, proteome-wide approaches to systematically map changes in host protein function during infection have remained challenging. Here we adapted a functional proteomics approach - Thermal-Proteome Profiling (TPP) - to systematically assess proteome-wide changes in host protein abundance and thermal stability throughout an STm infection cycle. By comparing macrophages treated with live or heat-killed STm, we observed that most host protein abundance changes occur independently of STm viability. In contrast, a large portion of host protein thermal stability changes were specific to infection with live STm. This included pronounced thermal stability changes in proteins linked to mitochondrial function (Acod1/Irg1, Cox6c, Samm50, Vdac1, and mitochondrial respiratory chain complex proteins), as well as the interferon-inducible protein with tetratricopeptide repeats, Ifit1. Integration of our TPP data with a publicly available STm-host protein-protein interaction database led us to discover that the secreted STm effector kinase, SteC, thermally destabilizes and phosphorylates the ribosomal preservation factor Serbp1. In summary, this work emphasizes the utility of measuring protein thermal stability during infection to accelerate the discovery of novel molecular interactions at the host-pathogen interface.
期刊介绍:
The European Journal of Cell Biology, a journal of experimental cell investigation, publishes reviews, original articles and short communications on the structure, function and macromolecular organization of cells and cell components. Contributions focusing on cellular dynamics, motility and differentiation, particularly if related to cellular biochemistry, molecular biology, immunology, neurobiology, and developmental biology are encouraged. Manuscripts describing significant technical advances are also welcome. In addition, papers dealing with biomedical issues of general interest to cell biologists will be published. Contributions addressing cell biological problems in prokaryotes and plants are also welcome.