Characterizing
the Range of Extracellular Protein
Post-Translational Modifications in a Cellulose-Degrading Bacteria
Using a Multiple Proteolyic Digestion/Peptide Fragmentation Approach
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Abstract
Post-translational modifications
(PTMs) are known to play a significant
role in many biological functions. The focus of this study is to optimize
an integrated experimental/informatics approach to more confidently
characterize the range of post-translational modifications of the
cellulosome protein complex used by the bacterium Clostridium
thermocellum to better understand how this protein
machine is tuned for enzymatic cellulose solubilization. To enhance
comprehensive characterization, the extracellular cellulosome proteins
were analyzed using multiple proteolytic digests (trypsin, Lys-C,
Glu-C) and multiple fragmentation techniques (collisionally activated
dissociation, electron transfer dissociation, decision tree). As expected,
peptide and protein identifications were increased by utilizing alternate
proteases and fragmentation methods, in addition to the increase in
protein sequence coverage. The complementarity of these experiments
also allowed for a global exploration of PTMs associated with the
cellulosome based upon a set of defined PTMs that included methylation,
oxidation, acetylation, phosphorylation, and signal peptide cleavage.
In these experiments, 85 modified peptides corresponding to 28 cellulosome
proteins were identified. Many of these modifications were located
in active cellulolytic or structural domains of the cellulosome proteins,
suggesting a level of possible regulatory control of protein function
in various cellulotyic conditions. The use of complementary proteolytic
digestion/peptide fragmentation processes allowed for independent
verification of PTMs in different experiments, thus leading to increased
confidence in PTM identifications