4.5 Article

The Ser/Thr/Tyr phosphoproteome of Lactococcus lactis IL1403 reveals multiply phosphorylated proteins

Journal

PROTEOMICS
Volume 8, Issue 17, Pages 3486-3493

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pmic.200800069

Keywords

kinase; Lactococcus lactis; phosphatase; phosphoproteome; phosphorylation

Funding

  1. Max-Planck society
  2. EU
  3. Danish Natural Science Research Council (FNU)

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Recent phosphoproteomics studies of several bacteria] species have firmly established protein phosphorylation on Ser/Thr/Tyr residues as a PTM in bacteria. In particular, our recent reports on the Scr/Thr/Tyr phosphoproteomes of bacterial model organisms Bacillus subtilis and Escherichia coli detected over 100 phosphorylation events in each of the bacterial species. Here we extend our analyses to Lactococcus lactis, a lactic acid bacterium widely employed by the food industry, in which protein phosphorylation at Ser/Thr/Tyr residues was barely studied at all. Despite the lack of almost any prior evidence of Ser/Thr/Tyr protein phosphorylation in L. lactis, we identified a phosphoproteome of a size comparable to that of E. coli and B. subtilis, with 73 phosphorylation sites distributed over 63 different proteins. The presence of several multiply phosphorylated proteins, as well as over-representation of phosphothreonines seems to be the distinguishing features of the L. lactis phosphoproteome. Evolutionary comparison and the conservation of phosphorylation sites in different bacterial organisms indicate that a majority of the detected phosphorylation sites are species-specific, and therefore have probably co-evolved with the adaptation of the bacterial species to their present-day ecological niches.

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