Proteomics

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Aggregating sequences that occur in many proteins constitute weak spots of bacterial proteostasis, part 2


ABSTRACT: Aggregation is a sequence-specific process, nucleated by short aggregation prone regions (APR) that can be exploited to induce aggregation of proteins containing the same APR. Here we find that most APRs are unique within a proteome, but that a small minority of APRs occur in many proteins. When aggregation is nucleated in bacteria by such frequently occurring APRs, it leads to massive and lethal inclusion body formation containing a large number of proteins. Build-up of bacterial resistance against these peptides is slow. In addition, the approach is effective against drug-resistant clinical isolates of E. coli and A. baumannii, reducing bacterial load in a murine bladder infection model. Our results indicate that redundant APRs are weak points of bacterial protein homeostasis and that targeting these may be an attractive antibacterial strategy.

INSTRUMENT(S): Q Exactive

ORGANISM(S): Escherichia Coli

SUBMITTER: Ladan Khodaparast  

LAB HEAD: Joost Schymkowitz

PROVIDER: PXD008701 | Pride | 2018-03-05

REPOSITORIES: Pride

Dataset's files

Source:
Action DRS
20160701_laleh_ladan_sample_02.mzXML Mzxml
20160701_laleh_ladan_sample_03.mzXML Mzxml
20160701_laleh_ladan_sample_04.mzXML Mzxml
20160701_laleh_ladan_sample_23.mzXML Mzxml
20160814_laleh_ladan_Khodaparast_sample_01.mzXML Mzxml
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Aggregation is a sequence-specific process, nucleated by short aggregation-prone regions (APRs) that can be exploited to induce aggregation of proteins containing the same APR. Here, we find that most APRs are unique within a proteome, but that a small minority of APRs occur in many proteins. When aggregation is nucleated in bacteria by such frequently occurring APRs, it leads to massive and lethal inclusion body formation containing a large number of proteins. Buildup of bacterial resistance ag  ...[more]

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