The Archaeal Proteome Project advances knowledge about archaeal cell biology through comprehensive proteomics

Author:

Schulze StefanORCID,Adams ZacharyORCID,Cerletti Micaela,De Castro RosanaORCID,Ferreira-Cerca SébastienORCID,Fufezan Christian,Giménez María Inés,Hippler MichaelORCID,Jevtic Zivojin,Knüppel Robert,Legerme Georgio,Lenz ChristofORCID,Marchfelder AnitaORCID,Maupin-Furlow JulieORCID,Paggi Roberto A.,Pfeiffer FriedhelmORCID,Poetsch Ansgar,Urlaub Henning,Pohlschroder MechthildORCID

Abstract

AbstractWhile many aspects of archaeal cell biology remain relatively unexplored, systems biology approaches like mass spectrometry (MS) based proteomics offer an opportunity for rapid advances. Unfortunately, the enormous amount of MS data generated often remains incompletely analyzed due to a lack of sophisticated bioinformatic tools and field-specific biological expertise for data interpretation. Here we present the initiation of the Archaeal Proteome Project (ArcPP), a community-based effort to comprehensively analyze archaeal proteomes. Starting with the model archaeon Haloferax volcanii, we reanalyze MS datasets from various strains and culture conditions. Optimized peptide spectrum matching, with strict control of false discovery rates, facilitates identifying > 72% of the reference proteome, with a median protein sequence coverage of 51%. These analyses, together with expert knowledge in diverse aspects of cell biology, provide meaningful insights into processes such as N-terminal protein maturation, N-glycosylation, and metabolism. Altogether, ArcPP serves as an invaluable blueprint for comprehensive prokaryotic proteomics.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness

National Agency for the Promotion of Science and Technology -ANPCyT- (PICT1477) and MINCyT-BMBF (Argentina-Germany)

U.S. Department of Energy

Foundation for the National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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