The Use of Proteomic Techniques to Study the Physiology and Virulence of Staphylococcus aureus

Staphylococcus aureus is a bacterial pathogen that is believed to be the most common agent of human infectious disease, causing conditions ranging from common skin lesions to life-threatening illnesses. S. aureus has also shown a remarkable ability to develop resistance to antimicrobial treatment,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rivera, Frances
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2010
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Online Access:http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/3603
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4846&context=etd
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Summary:Staphylococcus aureus is a bacterial pathogen that is believed to be the most common agent of human infectious disease, causing conditions ranging from common skin lesions to life-threatening illnesses. S. aureus has also shown a remarkable ability to develop resistance to antimicrobial treatment, making infections difficult to treat. In the post-genomic era, proteomic studies analyzing the protein complement of a genome in a particular organism at any given time, have gained real significance. This result is largely due to dynamic changes in protein expression profiles which can lead wide alterations in physiology and behavior. For proteomics, it is necessary to maximize protein concentration and to devise a method that can be easily employed and provide reproducible results. Most proteomic studies of S. aureus involve 2D gel electrophoresis (2-DE); however, 2-DE has many drawbacks. Proteins that are too large, hydrophobic, acidic, or basic are poorly resolved. Multi-dimensional protein identification (MudPIT) allows complex protein samples to be analyzed in solution. As yet, there has not been a study involving solely 2D liquid chromatography followed by mass spectrometric analysis in S. aureus ; therefore we sought to catalogue the intracellular proteome and secretome of a commonly used and well-studied lab strain, SH1000. This was conducted during post-exponential and stationary phases of growth so as to understand its adaptation over time by utilizing differential protein synthesis. We found cytoplasmic proteins involved in glycolysis to be highly expressed in post-exponential phase while proteins involved in tricarboxylic acid cycle to be prevalent in stationary phase. We also found production of agr-regulated secreted toxins and proteases to be upregulated in stationary phase. In addition to this we employed proteomic approaches to quantitatively profile the secretomes of leading clinical isolates of S. aureus, as such a study is currently lacking. These included the two most common hospital-associated S. aureus strains (USA100 and USA200), and the two most common community-associated S. aureus strains (USA300 and USA400). We found agr-regulated proteins are generally upregulated in CA-MRSA strains USA300 and USA400 and surface-associated proteins to be upregulated in HA-MRSA strains USA100 and USA200. This finding concurs with literature regarding transcriptomic studies showing a hyperactive agr in CA-MRSA strains compared to HA-MRSA strains.