Identification of Novel Physiological Substrates of Mycobacterium bovis BCG Protein Kinase G (PknG) by Label-free Quantitative Phosphoproteomics. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Mycobacterial Ser/Thr kinases play a critical role in bacterial physiology and pathogenesis. Linking kinases to the substrates they phosphorylate in vivo, thereby elucidating their exact functions, is still a challenge. The aim of this work was to associate protein phosphorylation in mycobacteria with important subsequent macro cellular events by identifying the physiological substrates of PknG in Mycobacterium bovis BCG. The study compared the phosphoproteome dynamics during the batch growth of M. bovis BCG versus the respective PknG knock-out mutant (ΔPknG-BCG) strains. We employed TiO2 phosphopeptide enrichment techniques combined with label-free quantitative phosphoproteomics workflow on LC-MS/MS. The comprehensive analysis of label-free data identified 603 phosphopeptides on 307 phosphoproteins with high confidence. Fifty-five phosphopeptides were differentially phosphorylated, of these, 23 phosphopeptides were phosphorylated in M. bovis BCG wild-type only and not in the mutant. These were further validated through targeted mass spectrometry assays (PRMs). Kinase-peptide docking studies based on a published crystal structure of PknG in complex with GarA revealed that the majority of identified phosphosites presented docking scores close to that seen in previously described PknG substrates, GarA, and ribosomal protein L13. Six out of the 22 phosphoproteins had higher docking scores than GarA, consistent with the proteins identified here being true PknG substrates. Based on protein functional analysis of the PknG substrates identified, this study confirms that PknG plays an important regulatory role in mycobacterial metabolism, through phosphorylation of ATP binding proteins and enzymes in the TCA cycle. This work also reinforces PknG's regulation of protein translation and folding machinery.

authors

  • Nakedi, Kehilwe
  • Calder, Bridget
  • Banerjee, Mousumi
  • Giddey, Alexander
  • Nel, Andrew J M
  • Garnett, Shaun
  • Blackburn, Jonathan M
  • Soares, Nelson C

publication date

  • March 16, 2018

Research

keywords

  • Bacterial Proteins
  • Cyclic GMP-Dependent Protein Kinases
  • Mycobacterium bovis
  • Phosphoproteins
  • Proteomics

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC6030727

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85049238775

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.jprot.2017.10.006

PubMed ID

  • 29549130

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 17

issue

  • 7