mBio (Apr 2024)

Proteins à la carte: riboproteogenomic exploration of bacterial N-terminal proteoform expression

  • Igor Fijalkowski,
  • Valdes Snauwaert,
  • Petra Van Damme

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00333-24
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 4

Abstract

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ABSTRACTIn recent years, it has become evident that the true complexity of bacterial proteomes remains underestimated. Gene annotation tools are known to propagate biases and overlook certain classes of truly expressed proteins, particularly proteoforms—protein isoforms arising from a single gene. Recent (re-)annotation efforts heavily rely on ribosome profiling by providing a direct readout of translation to fully describe bacterial proteomes. In this study, we employ a robust riboproteogenomic pipeline to conduct a systematic census of expressed N-terminal proteoform pairs, representing two isoforms encoded by a single gene raised by annotated and alternative translation initiation, in Salmonella. Intriguingly, conditional-dependent changes in relative utilization of annotated and alternative translation initiation sites (TIS) were observed in several cases. This suggests that TIS selection is subject to regulatory control, adding yet another layer of complexity to our understanding of bacterial proteomes.IMPORTANCEWith the emerging theme of genes within genes comprising the existence of alternative open reading frames (ORFs) generated by translation initiation at in-frame start codons, mechanisms that control the relative utilization of annotated and alternative TIS need to be unraveled and our molecular understanding of resulting proteoforms broadened. Utilizing complementary ribosome profiling strategies to map ORF boundaries, we uncovered dual-encoding ORFs generated by in-frame TIS usage in Salmonella. Besides demonstrating that alternative TIS usage may generate proteoforms with different characteristics, such as differential localization and specialized function, quantitative aspects of conditional retapamulin-assisted ribosome profiling (Ribo-RET) translation initiation maps offer unprecedented insights into the relative utilization of annotated and alternative TIS, enabling the exploration of gene regulatory mechanisms that control TIS usage and, consequently, the translation of N-terminal proteoform pairs.

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