Predominantly Orphan Secretome in the Lung Pathogen Mycobacterium abscessus Revealed by a Multipronged Growth-Phase-Driven Strategy

Author:

Chandra Harish1,Gupta Manish K.1,Lam Ying-Wai2,Yadav Jagjit S.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Pulmonary/Microbial Pathogenesis Laboratory, Department of Environmental and Public Health Sciences, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH 45267, USA

2. Vermont Biomedical Research Network Proteomics Facility, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT 05405, USA

Abstract

The emerging lung pathogen Mycobacterium abscessus is understudied for its virulence determinants and molecular targets for diagnosis and therapeutics. Here, we report a comprehensive secretome (600 proteins) of this species, which was identified using a multipronged strategy based on genetic/genomic, proteomic, and bioinformatic approaches. In-solution digested bottom-up proteomics from various growth phases identified a total of 517 proteins, while 2D-GE proteomics identified 33 proteins. A reporter-gene-fusion-based genomic library that was custom-generated in this study enabled the detection of 23 secretory proteins. A genome-wide survey for N-terminal signal sequences using bioinformatic tools (Psortb 2.0 and SignalP 3.0) combined with a strategy of the subtraction of lipoproteins and proteins containing multiple transmembrane domains yielded 116 secretory proteins. A homology search against the M. tuberculosis database identified nine additional secretory protein homologs that lacked a secretory signal sequence. Considering the little overlap (80 proteins) among the different approaches used, this study emphasized the importance of using a multipronged strategy for a comprehensive understanding of the secretome. Notably, the majority of the secreted proteins identified (over 50%) turned out to be “orphans” (those with no known functional homologs). The revelation of these species-specific orphan proteins offers a hitherto unexplored repertoire of potential targets for diagnostic, therapeutic, and vaccine research in this emerging lung pathogen.

Funder

National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

University of Cincinnati’s Center for Environmental Genetics

University of Cincinnati

NIH’s National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Publisher

MDPI AG

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